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+The Project Gutenberg Etext Essays and Tales, by Joseph Addison
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+Title: Essays and Tales
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+Author: Joseph Addison
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+September, 2001 [Etext #2791]
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext Essays and Tales, by Joseph Addison
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+This etext was prepared by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk,
+from the 1888 Cassell & Company edition.
+
+
+
+
+ESSAYS AND TALES
+
+by Joseph Addison
+
+
+
+
+Contents:
+
+Introduction
+Public Credit
+Household Superstitions
+Opera Lions
+Women and Wives
+The Italian Opera
+Lampoons
+True and False Humour
+Sa Ga Yean Qua Rash Tow's Impressions of London
+The Vision of Marraton
+Six Papers on Wit
+Friendship
+Chevy-Chase (Two Papers)
+A Dream of the Painters
+Spare Time (Two Papers)
+Censure
+The English Language
+The Vision of Mirza
+Genius
+Theodosius and Constantia
+Good Nature
+A Grinning Match
+Trust in God
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+
+The sixty-fourth volume of this Library contains those papers from
+the Tatler which were especially associated with the imagined
+character of ISAAC BICKERSTAFF, who was the central figure in that
+series; and in the twenty-ninth volume there is a similar collection
+of papers relating to the Spectator Club and SIR ROGER DE COVERLEY,
+who was the central figure in Steele and Addison's Spectator. Those
+volumes contained, no doubt, some of the best Essays of Addison and
+Steele. But in the Tatler and Spectator are full armouries of the
+wit and wisdom of these two writers, who summoned into life the army
+of the Essayists, and led it on to kindly war against the forces of
+Ill-temper and Ignorance. Envy, Hatred, Malice, and all their first
+cousins of the family of Uncharitableness, are captains under those
+two commanders-in-chief, and we can little afford to dismiss from
+the field two of the stoutest combatants against them. In this
+volume it is only Addison who speaks; and in another volume,
+presently to follow, there will be the voice of Steele.
+
+The two friends differed in temperament and in many of the outward
+signs of character; but these two little books will very distinctly
+show how wholly they agreed as to essentials. For Addison,
+Literature had a charm of its own; he delighted in distinguishing
+the finer graces of good style, and he drew from the truths of life
+the principles of taste in writing. For Steele, Literature was the
+life itself; he loved a true book for the soul he found in it. So
+he agreed with Addison in judgment. But the six papers on "Wit,"
+the two papers on "Chevy Chase," contained in this volume; the
+eleven papers on "Imagination," and the papers on "Paradise Lost,"
+which may be given in some future volume; were in a form of study
+for which Addison was far more apt than Steele. Thus as fellow-
+workers they gave a breadth to the character of Tatler and Spectator
+that could have been produced by neither of them, singly.
+
+The reader of this volume will never suppose that the artist's
+pleasure in good art and in analysis of its constituents removes him
+from direct enjoyment of the life about him; that he misses a real
+contact with all the world gives that is worth his touch. Good art
+is but nature, studied with love trained to the most delicate
+perception; and the good criticism in which the spirit of an artist
+speaks is, like Addison's, calm, simple, and benign. Pope yearned
+to attack John Dennis, a rough critic of the day, who had attacked
+his "Essay on Criticism." Addison had discouraged a very small
+assault of words. When Dennis attacked Addison's "Cato," Pope
+thought himself free to strike; but Addison took occasion to
+express, through Steele, a serious regret that he had done so. True
+criticism may be affected, as Addison's was, by some bias in the
+canons of taste prevalent in the writer's time, but, as Addison's
+did in the Chevy-Chase papers, it will dissent from prevalent
+misapplications of them, and it can never associate perception of
+the purest truth and beauty with petty arrogance, nor will it so
+speak as to give pain. When Wordsworth was remembering with love
+his mother's guidance of his childhood, and wished to suggest that
+there were mothers less wise in their ways, he was checked, he said,
+by the unwillingness to join thought of her "with any thought that
+looks at others' blame." So Addison felt towards his mother Nature,
+in literature and in life. He attacked nobody. With a light,
+kindly humour, that was never personal and never could give pain, he
+sought to soften the harsh lines of life, abate its follies, and
+inspire the temper that alone can overcome its wrongs.
+
+Politics, in which few then knew how to think calmly and recognise
+the worth of various opinion, Steele and Addison excluded from the
+pages of the Spectator. But the first paper in this volume is upon
+"Public Credit," and it did touch on the position of the country at
+a time when the shock of change caused by the Revolution of 1688-89,
+and also the strain of foreign war, were being severely felt.
+
+H. M.
+
+
+
+PUBLIC CREDIT.
+
+
+
+- Quoi quisque fere studio devinctus adhaeret
+Aut quibus i rebus multum sumus ante morati
+Atque in quo ratione fuit contenta magis mens,
+In somnis cadem plerumque videmur obire.
+LUCR., iv. 959.
+
+- What studies please, what most delight,
+And fill men's thoughts, they dream them o'er at night.
+
+CREECH.
+
+In one of my rambles, or rather speculations, I looked into the
+great hall where the bank is kept, and was not a little pleased to
+see the directors, secretaries, and clerks, with all the other
+members of that wealthy corporation, ranged in their several
+stations, according to the parts they act in that just and regular
+economy. This revived in my memory the many discourses which I had
+both read and heard concerning the decay of public credit, with the
+methods of restoring it; and which, in my opinion, have always been
+defective, because they have always been made with an eye to
+separate interests and party principles.
+
+The thoughts of the day gave my mind employment for the whole night;
+so that I fell insensibly into a kind of methodical dream, which
+disposed all my contemplations into a vision, or allegory, or what
+else the reader shall please to call it.
+
+Methoughts I returned to the great hall, where I had been the
+morning before; but to my surprise, instead of the company that I
+left there, I saw, towards the upper end of the hall, a beautiful
+virgin, seated on a throne of gold. Her name, as they told me, was
+Public Credit. The walls, instead of being adorned with pictures
+and maps, were hung with many Acts of Parliament written in golden
+letters. At the upper end of the hall was the Magna Charta, with
+the Act of Uniformity on the right hand, and the Act of Toleration
+on the left. At the lower end of the hall was the Act of
+Settlement, which was placed full in the eye of the virgin that sat
+upon the throne. Both the sides of the hall were covered with such
+Acts of Parliament as had been made for the establishment of public
+funds. The lady seemed to set an unspeakable value upon these
+several pieces of furniture, insomuch that she often refreshed her
+eye with them, and often smiled with a secret pleasure as she looked
+upon them; but, at the same time, showed a very particular
+uneasiness if she saw anything approaching that might hurt them.
+She appeared, indeed, infinitely timorous in all her behaviour: and
+whether it was from the delicacy of her constitution, or that she
+was troubled with vapours, as I was afterwards told by one who I
+found was none of her well-wishers, she changed colour and startled
+at everything she heard. She was likewise, as I afterwards found, a
+greater valetudinarian than any I had ever met with, even in her own
+sex, and subject to such momentary consumptions, that in the
+twinkling of an eye, she would fall away from the most florid
+complexion and the most healthful state of body, and wither into a
+skeleton. Her recoveries were often as sudden as her decays,
+insomuch that she would revive in a moment out of a wasting
+distemper, into a habit of the highest health and vigour.
+
+I had very soon an opportunity of observing these quick turns and
+changes in her constitution. There sat at her feet a couple of
+secretaries, who received every hour letters from all parts of the
+world, which the one or the other of them was perpetually reading to
+her; and according to the news she heard, to which she was
+exceedingly attentive, she changed colour, and discovered many
+symptoms of health or sickness.
+
+Behind the throne was a prodigious heap of bags of money, which were
+piled upon one another so high that they touched the ceiling. The
+floor on her right hand and on her left was covered with vast sums
+of gold that rose up in pyramids on either side of her. But this I
+did not so much wonder at, when I heard, upon inquiry, that she had
+the same virtue in her touch, which the poets tell us a Lydian king
+was formerly possessed of; and that she could convert whatever she
+pleased into that precious metal.
+
+After a little dizziness, and confused hurry of thought, which a man
+often meets with in a dream, methoughts the hall was alarmed, the
+doors flew open, and there entered half a dozen of the most hideous
+phantoms that I had ever seen, even in a dream, before that time.
+They came in two by two, though matched in the most dissociable
+manner, and mingled together in a kind of dance. It would be
+tedious to describe their habits and persons; for which reason I
+shall only inform my reader, that the first couple were Tyranny and
+Anarchy; the second were Bigotry and Atheism; the third, the Genius
+of a commonwealth and a young man of about twenty-two years of age,
+whose name I could not learn. He had a sword in his right hand,
+which in the dance he often brandished at the Act of Settlement; and
+a citizen, who stood by me, whispered in my ear, that he saw a
+sponge in his left hand. The dance of so many jarring natures put
+me in mind of the sun, moon, and earth, in the Rehearsal, that
+danced together for no other end but to eclipse one another.
+
+The reader will easily suppose, by what has been before said, that
+the lady on the throne would have been almost frighted to
+distraction, had she seen but any one of the spectres: what then
+must have been her condition when she saw them all in a body? She
+fainted, and died away at the sight.
+
+Et neque jam color est misto candore rubori;
+Nec vigor, et vires, et quae modo rise placebant;
+Nec corpus remanet--.
+
+OVID, Met. iii. 491.
+
+- Her spirits faint,
+Her blooming cheeks assume a pallid teint,
+And scarce her form remains.
+
+
+There was as great a change in the hill of money-bags and the heaps
+of money, the former shrinking and falling into so many empty bags,
+that I now found not above a tenth part of them had been filled with
+money.
+
+The rest, that took up the same space and made the same figure as
+the bags that were really filled with money, had been blown up with
+air, and called into my memory the bags full of wind, which Homer
+tells us his hero received as a present from AEolus. The great
+heaps of gold on either side the throne now appeared to be only
+heaps of paper, or little piles of notched sticks, bound up together
+in bundles, like Bath faggots.
+
+Whilst I was lamenting this sudden desolation that had been made
+before me, the whole scene vanished. In the room of the frightful
+spectres, there now entered a second dance of apparitions, very
+agreeably matched together, and made up of very amiable phantoms:
+the first pair was Liberty with Monarchy at her right hand; the
+second was Moderation leading in Religion; and the third, a person
+whom I had never seen, with the Genius of Great Britain. At the
+first entrance, the lady revived; the bags swelled to their former
+bulk; the piles of faggots and heaps of paper changed into pyramids
+of guineas: and, for my own part, I was so transported with joy
+that I awaked, though I must confess I would fain have fallen asleep
+again to have closed my vision, if I could have done it.
+
+
+
+HOUSEHOLD SUPERSTITIONS.
+
+
+
+Somnia, terrores magicos, miracula, sagas,
+Nocturnos lemures, portentaque Thessala rides?
+HOR., Ep. ii. 2, 208.
+
+
+Visions and magic spells, can you despise,
+And laugh at witches, ghosts, and prodigies?
+
+
+Going yesterday to dine with an old acquaintance, I had the
+misfortune to find his whole family very much dejected. Upon asking
+him the occasion of it, he told me that his wife had dreamt a very
+strange dream the night before, which they were afraid portended
+some misfortune to themselves or to their children. At her coming
+into the room, I observed a settled melancholy in her countenance,
+which I should have been troubled for, had I not heard from whence
+it proceeded. We were no sooner sat down, but, after having looked
+upon me a little while, "My dear," says she, turning to her husband,
+"you may now see the stranger that was in the candle last night."
+Soon after this, as they began to talk of family affairs, a little
+boy at the lower end of the table told her that he was to go into
+join-hand on Thursday. "Thursday!" says she. "No, child; if it
+please God, you shall not begin upon Childermas-day; tell your
+writing-master that Friday will be soon enough." I was reflecting
+with myself on the oddness of her fancy, and wondering that anybody
+would establish it as a rule, to lose a day in every week. In the
+midst of these my musings, she desired me to reach her a little salt
+upon the point of my knife, which I did in such a trepidation and
+hurry of obedience that I let it drop by the way; at which she
+immediately startled, and said it fell towards her. Upon this I
+looked very blank; and observing the concern of the whole table,
+began to consider myself, with some confusion, as a person that had
+brought a disaster upon the family. The lady, however, recovering
+herself after a little space, said to her husband with a sigh, "My
+dear, misfortunes never come single." My friend, I found, acted but
+an under part at his table; and, being a man of more good-nature
+than understanding, thinks himself obliged to fall in with all the
+passions and humours of his yoke-fellow. "Do not you remember,
+child," says she, "that the pigeon-house fell the very afternoon
+that our careless wench spilt the salt upon the table?"--"Yes," says
+he, "my dear; and the next post brought us an account of the battle
+of Almanza." The reader may guess at the figure I made, after
+having done all this mischief. I despatched my dinner as soon as I
+could, with my usual taciturnity; when, to my utter confusion, the
+lady seeing me quitting my knife and fork, and laying them across
+one another upon my plate, desired me that I would humour her so far
+as to take them out of that figure and place them side by side.
+What the absurdity was which I had committed I did not know, but I
+suppose there was some traditionary superstition in it; and
+therefore, in obedience to the lady of the house, I disposed of my
+knife and fork in two parallel lines, which is the figure I shall
+always lay them in for the future, though I do not know any reason
+for it.
+
+It is not difficult for a man to see that a person has conceived an
+aversion to him. For my own part, I quickly found, by the lady's
+looks, that she regarded me as a very odd kind of fellow, with an
+unfortunate aspect: for which reason I took my leave immediately
+after dinner, and withdrew to my own lodgings. Upon my return home,
+I fell into a profound contemplation on the evils that attend these
+superstitious follies of mankind; how they subject us to imaginary
+afflictions, and additional sorrows, that do not properly come
+within our lot. As if the natural calamities of life were not
+sufficient for it, we turn the most indifferent circumstances into
+misfortunes, and suffer as much from trifling accidents as from real
+evils. I have known the shooting of a star spoil a night's rest;
+and have seen a man in love grow pale, and lose his appetite, upon
+the plucking of a merry-thought. A screech-owl at midnight has
+alarmed a family more than a band of robbers; nay, the voice of a
+cricket hath struck more terror than the roaring of a lion. There
+is nothing so inconsiderable which may not appear dreadful to an
+imagination that is filled with omens and prognostics: a rusty nail
+or a crooked pin shoot up into prodigies.
+
+I remember I was once in a mixed assembly that was full of noise and
+mirth, when on a sudden an old woman unluckily observed there were
+thirteen of us in company. This remark struck a panic terror into
+several who were present, insomuch that one or two of the ladies
+were going to leave the room; but a friend of mine taking notice
+that one of our female companions was big with child, affirmed there
+were fourteen in the room, and that, instead of portending one of
+the company should die, it plainly foretold one of them should be
+born. Had not my friend found this expedient to break the omen, I
+question not but half the women in the company would have fallen
+sick that very night.
+
+An old maid that is troubled with the vapours produces infinite
+disturbances of this kind among her friends and neighbours. I know
+a maiden aunt of a great family, who is one of these antiquated
+Sibyls, that forebodes and prophesies from one end of the year to
+the other. She is always seeing apparitions and hearing death-
+watches; and was the other day almost frighted out of her wits by
+the great house-dog that howled in the stable, at a time when she
+lay ill of the toothache. Such an extravagant cast of mind engages
+multitudes of people not only in impertinent terrors, but in
+supernumerary duties of life, and arises from that fear and
+ignorance which are natural to the soul of man. The horror with
+which we entertain the thoughts of death, or indeed of any future
+evil, and the uncertainty of its approach, fill a melancholy mind
+with innumerable apprehensions and suspicions, and consequently
+dispose it to the observation of such groundless prodigies and
+predictions. For as it is the chief concern of wise men to retrench
+the evils of life by the reasonings of philosophy, it is the
+employment of fools to multiply them by the sentiments of
+superstition.
+
+For my own part, I should be very much troubled were I endowed with
+this divining quality, though it should inform me truly of
+everything that can befall me. I would not anticipate the relish of
+any happiness, nor feel the weight of any misery, before it actually
+arrives.
+
+I know but one way of fortifying my soul against these gloomy
+presages and terrors of mind; and that is, by securing to myself the
+friendship and protection of that Being who disposes of events and
+governs futurity. He sees, at one view, the whole thread of my
+existence, not only that part of it which I have already passed
+through, but that which runs forward into all the depths of
+eternity. When I lay me down to sleep, I recommend myself to His
+care; when I awake, I give myself up to His direction. Amidst all
+the evils that threaten me, I will look up to Him for help, and
+question not but He will either avert them, or turn them to my
+advantage. Though I know neither the time nor the manner of the
+death I am to die, I am not at all solicitous about it; because I am
+sure that he knows them both, and that He will not fail to comfort
+and support me under them.
+
+
+
+OPERA LIONS.
+
+
+
+Dic mihi, si fias tu leo, qualis eris?
+MART., xii. 93.
+
+Were you a lion, how would you behave?
+
+There is nothing that of late years has afforded matter of greater
+amusement to the town than Signior Nicolini's combat with a lion in
+the Haymarket, which has been very often exhibited to the general
+satisfaction of most of the nobility and gentry in the kingdom of
+Great Britain. Upon the first rumour of this intended combat, it
+was confidently affirmed, and is still believed, by many in both
+galleries, that there would be a tame lion sent from the tower every
+opera night in order to be killed by Hydaspes. This report, though
+altogether groundless, so universally prevailed in the upper regions
+of the playhouse, that some of the most refined politicians in those
+parts of the audience gave it out in whisper that the lion was a
+cousin-german of the tiger who made his appearance in King William's
+days, and that the stage would be supplied with lions at the public
+expense during the whole session. Many likewise were the
+conjectures of the treatment which this lion was to meet with from
+the hands of Signior Nicolini: some supposed that he was to subdue
+him in recitativo, as Orpheus used to serve the wild beasts in his
+time, and afterwards to knock him on the head; some fancied that the
+lion would not pretend to lay his paws upon the hero, by reason of
+the received opinion that a lion will not hurt a virgin: several
+who pretended to have seen the opera in Italy, had informed their
+friends that the lion was to act a part in High Dutch, and roar
+twice or thrice to a thorough bass before he fell at the feet of
+Hydaspes. To clear up a matter that was so variously reported, I
+have made it my business to examine whether this pretended lion is
+really the savage he appears to be, or only a counterfeit.
+
+But before I communicate my discoveries, I must acquaint the reader
+that upon my walking behind the scenes last winter, as I was
+thinking on something else, I accidentally jostled against a
+monstrous animal that extremely startled me, and, upon my nearer
+survey of it, appeared to be a lion rampant. The lion, seeing me
+very much surprised, told me, in a gentle voice, that I might come
+by him if I pleased; "for," says he, "I do not intend to hurt
+anybody." I thanked him very kindly and passed by him, and in a
+little time after saw him leap upon the stage and act his part with
+very great applause. It has been observed by several that the lion
+has changed his manner of acting twice or thrice since his first
+appearance, which will not seem strange when I acquaint my reader
+that the lion has been changed upon the audience three several
+times. The first lion was a candle-snuffer, who, being a fellow of
+a testy, choleric temper, overdid his part, and would not suffer
+himself to be killed so easily as he ought to have done: besides,
+it was observed of him, that he grew more surly every time he came
+out of the lion, and having dropped some words in ordinary
+conversation, as if he had not fought his best, and that he suffered
+himself to be thrown upon his back in the scuffle, and that he would
+wrestle with Mr. Nicolini for what he pleased, out of his lion's
+skin, it was thought proper to discard him: and it is verily
+believed to this day, that, had he been brought upon the stage
+another time, he would certainly have done mischief. Besides, it
+was objected against the first lion, that he reared himself so high
+upon his hinder paws, and walked in so erect a posture, that he
+looked more like an old man than a lion.
+
+The second lion was a tailor by trade, who belonged to the
+playhouse, and had the character of a mild and peaceable man in his
+profession. If the former was too furious, this was too sheepish
+for his part; inasmuch that, after a short modest walk upon the
+stage, he would fall at the first touch of Hydaspes, without
+grappling with him, and giving him an opportunity of showing his
+variety of Italian trips. It is said, indeed, that he once gave him
+a rip in his flesh-colour doublet: but this was only to make work
+for himself in his private character of a tailor. I must not omit
+that it was this second lion who treated me with so much humanity
+behind the scenes.
+
+The acting lion at present is, as I am informed, a country
+gentleman, who does it for his diversion, but desires his name may
+be concealed. He says very handsomely, in his own excuse, that he
+does not act for gain; that he indulges an innocent pleasure in it,
+and that it is better to pass away an evening in this manner than in
+gaming and drinking: but at the same time says, with a very
+agreeable raillery upon himself, that if his name should be known,
+the ill-natured world might call him "the ass in the lion's skin."
+This gentleman's temper is made out of such a happy mixture of the
+mild and the choleric, that he outdoes both his predecessors, and
+has drawn together greater audiences than have been known in the
+memory of man.
+
+I must not conclude my narrative without taking notice of a
+groundless report that has been raised to a gentleman's
+disadvantage, of whom I must declare myself an admirer; namely, that
+Signior Nicolini and the lion have been seen sitting peaceably by
+one another, and smoking a pipe together behind the scenes; by which
+their common enemies would insinuate that it is but a sham combat
+which they represent upon the stage: but upon inquiry I find, that
+if any such correspondence has passed between them, it was not till
+the combat was over, when the lion was to be looked upon as dead
+according to the received rules of the drama. Besides, this is what
+is practised every day in Westminster Hall, where nothing is more
+usual than to see a couple of lawyers, who have been tearing each
+other to pieces in the court, embracing one another as soon as they
+are out of it.
+
+I would not be thought in any part of this relation to reflect upon
+Signior Nicolini, who, in acting this part, only complies with the
+wretched taste of his audience: he knows very well that the lion
+has many more admirers than himself; as they say of the famous
+equestrian statue on the Pont-Neuf at Paris, that more people go to
+see the horse than the king who sits upon it. On the contrary, it
+gives me a just indignation to see a person whose action gives new
+majesty to kings, resolution to heroes, and softness to lovers, thus
+sinking from the greatness of his behaviour, and degraded into the
+character of the London Prentice. I have often wished that our
+tragedians would copy after this great master in action. Could they
+make the same use of their arms and legs, and inform their faces
+with as significant looks and passions, how glorious would an
+English tragedy appear with that action which is capable of giving a
+dignity to the forced thoughts, cold conceits, and unnatural
+expressions of an Italian opera! In the meantime, I have related
+this combat of the lion to show what are at present the reigning
+entertainments of the politer part of Great Britain.
+
+Audiences have often been reproached by writers for the coarseness
+of their taste; but our present grievance does not seem to be the
+want of a good taste, but of common sense.
+
+
+
+WOMEN AND WIVES.
+
+
+
+Parva leves capiunt animos. -
+OVID, Ars Am., i. 159.
+
+Light minds are pleased with trifles.
+
+When I was in France, I used to gaze with great astonishment at the
+splendid equipages, and party-coloured habits of that fantastic
+nation. I was one day in particular contemplating a lady that sat
+in a coach adorned with gilded Cupids, and finely painted with the
+Loves of Venus and Adonis. The coach was drawn by six milk-white
+horses, and loaden behind with the same number of powdered footmen.
+Just before the lady were a couple of beautiful pages, that were
+stuck among the harness, and, by their gay dresses and smiling
+features, looked like the elder brothers of the little boys that
+were carved and painted in every corner of the coach.
+
+The lady was the unfortunate Cleanthe, who afterwards gave an
+occasion to a pretty melancholy novel. She had for several years
+received the addresses of a gentleman, whom, after a long and
+intimate acquaintance, she forsook upon the account of this shining
+equipage, which had been offered to her by one of great riches but a
+crazy constitution. The circumstances in which I saw her were, it
+seems, the disguises only of a broken heart, and a kind of pageantry
+to cover distress, for in two months after, she was carried to her
+grave with the same pomp and magnificence, being sent thither partly
+by the loss of one lover and partly by the possession of another.
+
+I have often reflected with myself on this unaccountable humour in
+womankind, of being smitten with everything that is showy and
+superficial; and on the numberless evils that befall the sex from
+this light fantastical disposition. I myself remember a young lady
+that was very warmly solicited by a couple of importunate rivals,
+who, for several months together, did all they could to recommend
+themselves, by complacency of behaviour and agreeableness of
+conversation. At length, when the competition was doubtful, and the
+lady undetermined in her choice, one of the young lovers very
+luckily bethought himself of adding a supernumerary lace to his
+liveries, which had so good an effect that he married her the very
+week after.
+
+The usual conversation of ordinary women very much cherishes this
+natural weakness of being taken with outside and appearance. Talk
+of a new-married couple, and you immediately hear whether they keep
+their coach and six, or eat in plate. Mention the name of an absent
+lady, and it is ten to one but you learn something of her gown and
+petticoat. A ball is a great help to discourse, and a birthday
+furnishes conversation for a twelvemonth after. A furbelow of
+precious stones, a hat buttoned with a diamond, a brocade waistcoat
+or petticoat, are standing topics. In short, they consider only the
+drapery of the species, and never cast away a thought on those
+ornaments of the mind that make persons illustrious in themselves
+and useful to others. When women are thus perpetually dazzling one
+another's imaginations, and filling their heads with nothing but
+colours, it is no wonder that they are more attentive to the
+superficial parts of life than the solid and substantial blessings
+of it. A girl who has been trained up in this kind of conversation
+is in danger of every embroidered coat that comes in her way. A
+pair of fringed gloves may be her ruin. In a word, lace and
+ribands, silver and gold galloons, with the like glittering gewgaws,
+are so many lures to women of weak minds or low educations, and,
+when artificially displayed, are able to fetch down the most airy
+coquette from the wildest of her flights and rambles.
+
+True happiness is of a retired nature, and an enemy to pomp and
+noise; it arises, in the first place, from the enjoyment of one's
+self, and, in the next, from the friendship and conversation of a
+few select companions; it loves shade and solitude, and naturally
+haunts groves and fountains, fields and meadows; in short, it feels
+everything it wants within itself, and receives no addition from
+multitudes of witnesses and spectators. On the contrary, false
+happiness loves to be in a crowd, and to draw the eyes of the world
+upon her. She does not receive any satisfaction from the applauses
+which she gives herself, but from the admiration she raises in
+others. She flourishes in courts and palaces, theatres and
+assemblies, and has no existence but when she is looked upon.
+
+Aurelia, though a woman of great quality, delights in the privacy of
+a country life, and passes away a great part of her time in her own
+walks and gardens. Her husband, who is her bosom friend and
+companion in her solitudes, has been in love with her ever since he
+knew her. They both abound with good sense, consummate virtue, and
+a mutual esteem; and are a perpetual entertainment to one another.
+Their family is under so regular an economy, in its hours of
+devotion and repast, employment and diversion, that it looks like a
+little commonwealth within itself. They often go into company, that
+they may return with the greater delight to one another; and
+sometimes live in town, not to enjoy it so properly as to grow weary
+of it, that they may renew in themselves the relish of a country
+life. By this means they are happy in each other, beloved by their
+children, adored by their servants, and are become the envy, or
+rather the delight, of all that know them.
+
+How different to this is the life of Fulvia! She considers her
+husband as her steward, and looks upon discretion and good
+housewifery as little domestic virtues unbecoming a woman of
+quality. She thinks life lost in her own family, and fancies
+herself out of the world when she is not in the ring, the playhouse,
+or the drawing-room. She lives in a perpetual motion of body and
+restlessness of thought, and is never easy in any one place when she
+thinks there is more company in another. The missing of an opera
+the first night would be more afflicting to her than the death of a
+child. She pities all the valuable part of her own sex, and calls
+every woman of a prudent, modest, retired life, a poor-spirited,
+unpolished creature. What a mortification would it be to Fulvia, if
+she knew that her setting herself to view is but exposing herself,
+and that she grows contemptible by being conspicuous!
+
+I cannot conclude my paper without observing that Virgil has very
+finely touched upon this female passion for dress and show, in the
+character of Camilla, who, though she seems to have shaken off all
+the other weaknesses of her sex, is still described as a woman in
+this particular. The poet tells us, that after having made a great
+slaughter of the enemy, she unfortunately cast her eye on a Trojan,
+who wore an embroidered tunic, a beautiful coat of mail, with a
+mantle of the finest purple. "A golden bow," says he, "hung upon
+his shoulder; his garment was buckled with a golden clasp, and his
+head covered with a helmet of the same shining metal." The Amazon
+immediately singled out this well-dressed warrior, being seized with
+a woman's longing for the pretty trappings that he was adorned with:
+
+
+- Totumque incauta per agmen,
+Faemineo praedae et spoliorum ardebat amore.
+AEn., xi. 781.
+
+- So greedy was she bent
+On golden spoils, and on her prey intent.
+
+DRYDEN.
+
+
+This heedless pursuit after these glittering trifles, the poet, by a
+nice concealed moral, represents to have been the destruction of his
+female hero.
+
+
+
+THE ITALIAN OPERA.
+
+
+
+- Equitis quoque jam migravit ab aure voluptas
+Omnis ad incertos oculos, et gaudia vana.
+HOR., Ep. ii. 1, 187.
+
+But now our nobles too are fops and vain,
+Neglect the sense, but love the painted scene.
+CREECH.
+
+It is my design in this paper to deliver down to posterity a
+faithful account of the Italian opera, and of the gradual progress
+which it has made upon the English stage; for there is no question
+but our great-grandchildren will be very curious to know the reason
+why their forefathers used to sit together like an audience of
+foreigners in their own country, and to hear whole plays acted
+before them in a tongue which they did not understand.
+
+Arsinoe was the first opera that gave us a taste of Italian music.
+The great success this opera met with produced some attempts of
+forming pieces upon Italian plans, which should give a more natural
+and reasonable entertainment than what can be met with in the
+elaborate trifles of that nation. This alarmed the poetasters and
+fiddlers of the town, who were used to deal in a more ordinary kind
+of ware; and therefore laid down an established rule, which is
+received as such to this day, "That nothing is capable of being well
+set to music that is not nonsense."
+
+This maxim was no sooner received, but we immediately fell to
+translating the Italian operas; and as there was no great danger of
+hurting the sense of those extraordinary pieces, our authors would
+often make words of their own which were entirely foreign to the
+meaning of the passages they pretended to translate; their chief
+care being to make the numbers of the English verse answer to those
+of the Italian, that both of them might go to the same tune. Thus
+the famous swig in Camilla:
+
+
+"Barbara sit' intendo," &c.
+"Barbarous woman, yes, I know your meaning,"
+
+
+which expresses the resentments of an angry lover, was translated
+into that English lamentation,
+
+
+"Frail are a lover's hopes," &c.
+
+
+And it was pleasant enough to see the most refined persons of the
+British nation dying away and languishing to notes that were filled
+with a spirit of rage and indignation. It happened also very
+frequently, where the sense was rightly translated, the necessary
+transposition of words, which were drawn out of the phrase of one
+tongue into that of another, made the music appear very absurd in
+one tongue that was very natural in the other. I remember an
+Italian verse that ran thus, word for word:
+
+
+"And turned my rage into pity;"
+
+
+which the English for rhyme's sake translated:
+
+
+"And into pity turned my rage."
+
+
+By this means the soft notes that were adapted to pity in the
+Italian fell upon the word rage in the English; and the angry sounds
+that were turned to rage in the original, were made to express pity
+in the translation. It oftentimes happened, likewise, that the
+finest notes in the air fell upon the most insignificant words in
+the sentence. I have known the word "and" pursued through the whole
+gamut; have been entertained with many a melodious "the;" and have
+heard the most beautiful graces, quavers, and divisions bestowed
+upon "then," "for," and "from," to the eternal honour of our English
+particles.
+
+The next step to our refinement was the introducing of Italian
+actors into our opera; who sang their parts in their own language,
+at the same time that our countrymen performed theirs in our native
+tongue. The king or hero of the play generally spoke in Italian,
+and his slaves answered him in English. The lover frequently made
+his court, and gained the heart of his princess, in a language which
+she did not understand. One would have thought it very difficult to
+have carried on dialogues after this manner without an interpreter
+between the persons that conversed together; but this was the state
+of the English stage for about three years.
+
+At length the audience grew tired of understanding half the opera;
+and therefore, to ease themselves entirely of the fatigue of
+thinking, have so ordered it at present, that the whole opera is
+performed in an unknown tongue. We no longer understand the
+language of our own stage; insomuch that I have often been afraid,
+when I have seen our Italian performers chattering in the vehemence
+of action, that they have been calling us names, and abusing us
+among themselves; but I hope, since we put such an entire confidence
+in them, they will not talk against us before our faces, though they
+may do it with the same safety as if it were behind our backs. In
+the meantime, I cannot forbear thinking how naturally an historian
+who writes two or three hundred years hence, and does not know the
+taste of his wise forefathers, will make the following reflection:
+"In the beginning of the eighteenth century, the Italian tongue was
+so well understood in England, that operas were acted on the public
+stage in that language."
+
+One scarce knows how to be serious in the confutation of an
+absurdity that shows itself at the first sight. It does not want
+any great measure of sense to see the ridicule of this monstrous
+practice; but what makes it the more astonishing, it is not the
+taste of the rabble, but of persons of the greatest politeness,
+which has established it.
+
+If the Italians have a genius for music above the English, the
+English have a genius for other performances of a much higher
+nature, and capable of giving the mind a much nobler entertainment.
+Would one think it was possible, at a time when an author lived that
+was able to write the Phaedra and Hippolitus, for a people to be so
+stupidly fond of the Italian opera, as scarce to give a third day's
+hearing to that admirable tragedy? Music is certainly a very
+agreeable entertainment: but if it would take the entire possession
+of our ears; if it would make us incapable of hearing sense; if it
+would exclude arts that have a much greater tendency to the
+refinement of human nature; I must confess I would allow it no
+better quarter than Plato has done, who banishes it out of his
+commonwealth.
+
+At present our notions of music are so very uncertain, that we do
+not know what it is we like; only, in general, we are transported
+with anything that is not English: so it be of a foreign growth,
+let it be Italian, French, or High Dutch, it is the same thing. In
+short, our English music is quite rooted out, and nothing yet
+planted in its stead.
+
+When a royal palace is burnt to the ground, every man is at liberty
+to present his plan for a new one; and, though it be but
+indifferently put together, it may furnish several hints that may be
+of use to a good architect. I shall take the same liberty in a
+following paper of giving my opinion upon the subject of music;
+which I shall lay down only in a problematical manner, to be
+considered by those who are masters in the art.
+
+
+
+LAMPOONS.
+
+
+
+Saevit atrox Volscens, nec teli conspicit usquam
+Auctorem, nec quo se ardens immittere possit.
+VIRG., AEn. ix. 420.
+
+Fierce Volscens foams with rage, and, gazing round,
+Descry'd not him who gave the fatal wound;
+Nor knew to fix revenge. DRYDEN.
+
+There is nothing that more betrays a base, ungenerous spirit than
+the giving of secret stabs to a man's reputation. Lampoons and
+satires, that are written with wit and spirit, are like poisoned
+darts, which not only inflict a wound, but make it incurable. For
+this reason I am very much troubled when I see the talents' of
+humour and ridicule in the possession of an ill-natured man. There
+cannot be a greater gratification to a barbarous and inhuman wit,
+than to stir up sorrow in the heart of a private person, to raise
+uneasiness among near relations, and to expose whole families to
+derision, at the same time that he remains unseen and undiscovered.
+If, besides the accomplishments of being witty and ill-natured, a
+man is vicious into the bargain, he is one of the most mischievous
+creatures that can enter into a civil society. His satire will then
+chiefly fall upon those who ought to be the most exempt from it.
+Virtue, merit, and everything that is praiseworthy, will be made the
+subject of ridicule and buffoonery. It is impossible to enumerate
+the evils which arise from these arrows that fly in the dark; and I
+know no other excuse that is or can be made for them, than that the
+wounds they give are only imaginary, and produce nothing more than a
+secret shame or sorrow in the mind of the suffering person. It must
+indeed be confessed that a lampoon or a satire do not carry in them
+robbery or murder; but at the same time, how many are there that
+would not rather lose a considerable sum of money, or even life
+itself, than be set up as a mark of infamy and derision? And in
+this case a man should consider that an injury is not to be measured
+by the notions of him that gives, but of him that receives it.
+
+Those who can put the best countenance upon the outrages of this
+nature which are offered them, are not without their secret anguish.
+I have often observed a passage in Socrates's behaviour at his death
+in a light wherein none of the critics have considered it. That
+excellent man entertaining his friends a little before he drank the
+bowl of poison, with a discourse on the immortality of the soul, at
+his entering upon it says that he does not believe any the most
+comic genius can censure him for talking upon such a subject at such
+at a time. This passage, I think, evidently glances upon
+Aristophanes, who writ a comedy on purpose to ridicule the
+discourses of that divine philosopher. It has been observed by many
+writers that Socrates was so little moved at this piece of
+buffoonery, that he was several times present at its being acted
+upon the stage, and never expressed the least resentment of it.
+But, with submission, I think the remark I have here made shows us
+that this unworthy treatment made an impression upon his mind,
+though he had been too wise to discover it.
+
+When Julius Caesar was lampooned by Catullus, he invited him to a
+supper, and treated him with such a generous civility, that he made
+the poet his friend ever after. Cardinal Mazarine gave the same
+kind of treatment to the learned Quillet, who had reflected upon his
+eminence in a famous Latin poem. The cardinal sent for him, and,
+after some kind expostulations upon what he had written, assured him
+of his esteem, and dismissed him with a promise of the next good
+abbey that should fall, which he accordingly conferred upon him in a
+few months after. This had so good an effect upon the author, that
+he dedicated the second edition of his book to the cardinal, after
+having expunged the passages which had given him offence.
+
+Sextus Quintus was not of so generous and forgiving a temper. Upon
+his being made Pope, the statue of Pasquin was one night dressed in
+a very dirty shirt, with an excuse written under it, that he was
+forced to wear foul linen because his laundress was made a princess.
+This was a reflection upon the Pope's sister, who, before the
+promotion of her brother, was in those mean circumstances that
+Pasquin represented her. As this pasquinade made a great noise in
+Rome, the Pope offered a considerable sum of money to any person
+that should discover the author of it. The author, relying upon his
+holiness's generosity, as also on some private overtures which he
+had received from him, made the discovery himself; upon which the
+Pope gave him the reward he had promised, but, at the same time, to
+disable the satirist for the future, ordered his tongue to be cut
+out, and both his hands to be chopped off. Aretine is too trite an
+instance. Every one knows that all the kings of Europe were his
+tributaries. Nay, there is a letter of his extant, in which he
+makes his boast that he had laid the Sophi of Persia under
+contribution.
+
+Though in the various examples which I have here drawn together,
+these several great men behaved themselves very differently towards
+the wits of the age who had reproached them, they all of them
+plainly showed that they were very sensible of their reproaches, and
+consequently that they received them as very great injuries. For my
+own part, I would never trust a man that I thought was capable of
+giving these secret wounds; and cannot but think that he would hurt
+the person, whose reputation he thus assaults, in his body or in his
+fortune, could he do it with the same security. There is indeed
+something very barbarous and inhuman in the ordinary scribblers of
+lampoons. An innocent young lady shall be exposed for an unhappy
+feature; a father of a family turned to ridicule for some domestic
+calamity; a wife be made uneasy all her life for a misinterpreted
+word or action; nay, a good, a temperate, and a just man shall be
+put out of countenance by the representation of those qualities that
+should do him honour; so pernicious a thing is wit when it is not
+tempered with virtue and humanity.
+
+I have indeed heard of heedless, inconsiderate writers that, without
+any malice, have sacrificed the reputation of their friends and
+acquaintance to a certain levity of temper, and a silly ambition of
+distinguishing themselves by a spirit of raillery and satire; as if
+it were not infinitely more honourable to be a good-natured man than
+a wit. Where there is this little petulant humour in an author, he
+is often very mischievous without designing to be so. For which
+reason I always lay it down as a rule that an indiscreet man is more
+hurtful than an ill-natured one; for as the one will only attack his
+enemies, and those he wishes ill to, the other injures indifferently
+both friends and foes. I cannot forbear, on this occasion,
+transcribing a fable out of Sir Roger L'Estrange, which accidentally
+lies before me. A company of waggish boys were watching of frogs at
+the side of a pond, and still as any of them put up their heads,
+they would be pelting them down again with stones. "Children," says
+one of the frogs, "you never consider that though this be play to
+you, 'tis death to us."
+
+As this week is in a manner set apart and dedicated to serious
+thoughts, I shall indulge myself in such speculations as may not be
+altogether unsuitable to the season; and in the meantime, as the
+settling in ourselves a charitable frame of mind is a work very
+proper for the time, I have in this paper endeavoured to expose that
+particular breach of charity which has been generally overlooked by
+divines, because they are but few who can be guilty of it.
+
+
+
+TRUE AND FALSE HUMOUR.
+
+
+
+- Risu inepto res ineptior nulla est.
+CATULL., Carm. 39 in Egnat.
+
+Nothing so foolish as the laugh of fools.
+
+Among all kinds of writing, there is none in which authors are more
+apt to miscarry than in works of humour, as there is none in which
+they are more ambitious to excel. It is not an imagination that
+teems with monsters, a head that is filled with extravagant
+conceptions, which is capable of furnishing the world with
+diversions of this nature; and yet, if we look into the productions
+of several writers, who set up for men of humour, what wild,
+irregular fancies, what unnatural distortions of thought do we meet
+with? If they speak nonsense, they believe they are talking humour;
+and when they have drawn together a scheme of absurd, inconsistent
+ideas, they are not able to read it over to themselves without
+laughing. These poor gentlemen endeavour to gain themselves the
+reputation of wits and humorists, by such monstrous conceits as
+almost qualify them for Bedlam; not considering that humour should
+always lie under the check of reason, and that it requires the
+direction of the nicest judgment, by so much the more as it indulges
+itself in the most boundless freedoms. There is a kind of nature
+that is to be observed in this sort of compositions, as well as in
+all other; and a certain regularity of thought which must discover
+the writer to be a man of sense, at the same time that he appears
+altogether given up to caprice. For my part, when I read the
+delirious mirth of an unskilful author, I cannot be so barbarous as
+to divert myself with it, but am rather apt to pity the man, than to
+laugh at anything he writes.
+
+The deceased Mr. Shadwell, who had himself a great deal of the
+talent which I am treating of, represents an empty rake, in one of
+his plays, as very much surprised to hear one say that breaking of
+windows was not humour; and I question not but several English
+readers will be as much startled to hear me affirm, that many of
+those raving, incoherent pieces, which are often spread among us,
+under odd chimerical titles, are rather the offsprings of a
+distempered brain than works of humour.
+
+It is, indeed, much easier to describe what is not humour than what
+is; and very difficult to define it otherwise than as Cowley has
+done wit, by negatives. Were I to give my own notions of it, I
+would deliver them after Plato's manner, in a kind of allegory, and,
+by supposing Humour to be a person, deduce to him all his
+qualifications, according to the following genealogy. Truth was the
+founder of the family, and the father of Good Sense. Good Sense was
+the father of Wit, who married a lady of a collateral line called
+Mirth, by whom he had issue Humour. Humour therefore being the
+youngest of this illustrious family, and descended from parents of
+such different dispositions, is very various and unequal in his
+temper; sometimes you see him putting on grave looks and a solemn
+habit, sometimes airy in his behaviour and fantastic in his dress;
+insomuch that at different times he appears as serious as a judge,
+and as jocular as a merry-andrew. But, as he has a great deal of
+the mother in his constitution, whatever mood he is in, he never
+fails to make his company laugh.
+
+But since there is an impostor abroad, who takes upon him the name
+of this young gentleman, and would willingly pass for him in the
+world; to the end that well-meaning persons may not be imposed upon
+by cheats, I would desire my readers, when they meet with this
+pretender, to look into his parentage, and to examine him strictly,
+whether or no he be remotely allied to Truth, and lineally descended
+from Good Sense; if not, they may conclude him a counterfeit. They
+may likewise distinguish him by a loud and excessive laughter, in
+which he seldom gets his company to join with him. For as True
+Humour generally looks serious while everybody laughs about him,
+False Humour is always laughing whilst everybody about him looks
+serious. I shall only add, if he has not in him a mixture of both
+parents--that is, if he would pass for the offspring of Wit without
+Mirth, or Mirth without Wit, you may conclude him to be altogether
+spurious and a cheat.
+
+The impostor of whom I am speaking descends originally from
+Falsehood, who was the mother of Nonsense, who was brought to bed of
+a son called Phrensy, who married one of the daughters of Folly,
+commonly known by the name of Laughter, on whom he begot that
+monstrous infant of which I have been here speaking. I shall set
+down at length the genealogical table of False Humour, and, at the
+same time, place under it the genealogy of True Humour, that the
+reader may at one view behold their different pedigrees and
+relations:-
+
+
+Falsehood.
+Nonsense.
+Phrensy.--Laughter.
+False Humour.
+
+Truth.
+Good Sense.
+Wit.--Mirth,
+Humour.
+
+
+I might extend the allegory, by mentioning several of the children
+of False Humour, who are more in number than the sands of the sea,
+and might in particular enumerate the many sons and daughters which
+he has begot in this island. But as this would be a very invidious
+task, I shall only observe in general that False Humour differs from
+the True as a monkey does from a man.
+
+First of all, he is exceedingly given to little apish tricks and
+buffooneries.
+
+Secondly, he so much delights in mimicry, that it is all one to him
+whether he exposes by it vice and folly, luxury and avarice; or, on
+the contrary, virtue and wisdom, pain and poverty.
+
+Thirdly, he is wonderfully unlucky, insomuch that he will bite the
+hand that feeds him, and endeavour to ridicule both friends and foes
+indifferently. For, having but small talents, he must be merry
+where he can, not where he should.
+
+Fourthly, Being entirely void of reason, he pursues no point either
+of morality or instruction, but is ludicrous only for the sake of
+being so.
+
+Fifthly, Being incapable of anything but mock representations, his
+ridicule is always personal, and aimed at the vicious man, or the
+writer; not at the vice, or at the writing.
+
+I have here only pointed at the whole species of false humorists;
+but, as one of my principal designs in this paper is to beat down
+that malignant spirit which discovers itself in the writings of the
+present age, I shall not scruple, for the future, to single out any
+of the small wits that infest the world with such compositions as
+are ill-natured, immoral, and absurd. This is the only exception
+which I shall make to the general rule I have prescribed myself, of
+attacking multitudes; since every honest man ought to look upon
+himself as in a natural state of war with the libeller and
+lampooner, and to annoy them wherever they fall in his way. This is
+but retaliating upon them, and treating them as they treat others.
+
+
+
+SA GA YEAN QUA RASH TOW'S IMPRESSIONS OF LONDON.
+
+
+
+Nunquam aliud natura, aliud sapientia dicit.
+JUV., Sat. xiv. 321.
+
+Good taste and nature always speak the same.
+
+When the four Indian kings were in this country about a twelvemonth
+ago, I often mixed with the rabble, and followed them a whole day
+together, being wonderfully struck with the sight of everything that
+is new or uncommon. I have, since their departure, employed a
+friend to make many inquiries of their landlord the upholsterer
+relating to their manners and conversation, as also concerning the
+remarks which they made in this country; for next to the forming a
+right notion of such strangers, I should be desirous of learning
+what ideas they have conceived of us.
+
+The upholsterer finding my friend very inquisitive about these his
+lodgers, brought him sometime since a little bundle of papers, which
+he assured him were written by King Sa Ga Yean Qua Rash Tow, and, as
+he supposes, left behind by some mistake. These papers are now
+translated, and contain abundance of very odd observations, which I
+find this little fraternity of kings made during their stay in the
+Isle of Great Britain. I shall present my reader with a short
+specimen of them in this paper, and may perhaps communicate more to
+him hereafter. In the article of London are the following words,
+which without doubt are meant of the church of St. Paul
+
+"On the most rising part of the town there stands a huge house, big
+enough to contain the whole nation of which I am the king. Our good
+brother E Tow O Koam, King of the Rivers, is of opinion it was made
+by the hands of that great God to whom it is consecrated. The Kings
+of Granajar and of the Six Nations believe that it was created with
+the earth, and produced on the same day with the sun and moon. But
+for my own part, by the best information that I could get of this
+matter, I am apt to think that this prodigious pile was fashioned
+into the shape it now bears by several tools and instruments, of
+which they have a wonderful variety in this country. It was
+probably at first a huge misshapen rock that grew upon the top of
+the hill, which the natives of the country, after having cut into a
+kind of regular figure, bored and hollowed with incredible pains and
+industry, till they had wrought in it all those beautiful vaults and
+caverns into which it is divided at this day. As soon as this rock
+was thus curiously scooped to their liking, a prodigious number of
+hands must have been employed in chipping the outside of it, which
+is now as smooth as the surface of a pebble; and is in several
+places hewn out into pillars that stand like the trunks of so many
+trees bound about the top with garlands of leaves. It is probable
+that when this great work was begun, which must have been many
+hundred years ago, there was some religion among this people; for
+they give it the name of a temple, and have a tradition that it was
+designed for men to pay their devotion in. And indeed, there are
+several reasons which make us think that the natives of this country
+had formerly among them some sort of worship, for they set apart
+every seventh day as sacred; but upon my going into one of these
+holy houses on that day, I could not observe any circumstance of
+devotion in their behaviour. There was, indeed, a man in black, who
+was mounted above the rest, and seemed to utter some thing with a
+great deal of vehemence; but as for those underneath him, instead of
+paying their worship to the deity of the place, they were most of
+them bowing and curtsying to one another, and a considerable number
+of them fast asleep.
+
+"The queen of the country appointed two men to attend us, that had
+enough of our language to make themselves understood in some few
+particulars. But we soon perceived these two were great enemies to
+one another, and did not always agree in the same story. We could
+make a shift to gather out of one of them that this island was very
+much infested with a monstrous kind of animals, in the shape of men,
+called Whigs; and he often told us that he hoped we should meet with
+none of them in our way, for that, if we did, they would be apt to
+knock us down for being kings.
+
+"Our other interpreter used to talk very much of a kind of animal
+called a Tory, that was as great a monster as the Whig, and would
+treat us as ill for being foreigners. These two creatures, it
+seems, are born with a secret antipathy to one another, and engage
+when they meet as naturally as the elephant and the rhinoceros. But
+as we saw none of either of these species, we are apt to think that
+our guides deceived us with misrepresentations and fictions, and
+amused us with an account of such monsters as are not really in
+their country.
+
+"These particulars we made a shift to pick out from the discourse of
+our interpreters, which we put together as well as we could, being
+able to understand but here and there a word of what they said, and
+afterwards making up the meaning of it among ourselves. The men of
+the country are very cunning and ingenious in handicraft works, but
+withal so very idle, that we often saw young, lusty, raw-boned
+fellows carried up and down the streets in little covered rooms by a
+couple of porters, who were hired for that service. Their dress is
+likewise very barbarous, for they almost strangle themselves about
+the neck, and bind their bodies with many ligatures, that we are apt
+to think are the occasion of several distempers among them, which
+our country is entirely free from. Instead of those beautiful
+feathers with which we adorn our heads, they often buy up a
+monstrous bush of hair, which covers their heads, and falls down in
+a large fleece below the middle of their backs, with which they walk
+up and down the streets, and are as proud of it as if it was of
+their own growth.
+
+"We were invited to one of their public diversions, where we hoped
+to have seen the great men of their country running down a stag, or
+pitching a bar, that we might have discovered who were the persons
+of the greatest abilities among them; but instead of that, they
+conveyed us into a huge room lighted up with abundance of candles,
+where this lazy people sat still above three hours to see several
+feats of ingenuity performed by others, who it seems were paid for
+it.
+
+"As for the women of the country, not being able to talk with them,
+we could only make our remarks upon them at a distance. They let
+the hair of their heads grow to a great length; but as the men make
+a great show with heads of hair that are none of their own, the
+women, who they say have very fine heads of hair, tie it up in a
+knot, and cover it from being seen. The women look like angels, and
+would be more beautiful than the sun, were it not for little black
+spots that are apt to break out in their faces, and sometimes rise
+in very odd figures. I have observed that those little blemishes
+wear off very soon; but when they disappear in one part of the face,
+they are very apt to break out in another, insomuch that I have seen
+a spot upon the forehead in the afternoon which was upon the chin in
+the morning."
+
+The author then proceeds to show the absurdity of breeches and
+petticoats, with many other curious observations, which I shall
+reserve for another occasion: I cannot, however, conclude this
+paper without taking notice that amidst these wild remarks there now
+and then appears something very reasonable. I cannot likewise
+forbear observing, that we are all guilty in some measure of the
+same narrow way of thinking which we meet with in this abstract of
+the Indian journal, when we fancy the customs, dresses, and manners
+of other countries are ridiculous and extravagant if they do not
+resemble those of our own.
+
+
+
+THE VISION OF MARRATON.
+
+
+
+Felices errore suo. -
+LUCAN i. 454.
+
+Happy in their mistake.
+
+The Americans believe that all creatures have souls, not only men
+and women, but brutes, vegetables, nay, even the most inanimate
+things, as stocks and stones. They believe the same of all works of
+art, as of knives, boats, looking-glasses; and that, as any of these
+things perish, their souls go into another world, which is inhabited
+by the ghosts of men and women. For this reason they always place
+by the corpse of their dead friend a bow and arrows, that he may
+make use of the souls of them in the other world, as he did of their
+wooden bodies in this. How absurd soever such an opinion as this
+may appear, our European philosophers have maintained several
+notions altogether as improbable. Some of Plato's followers, in
+particular, when they talk of the world of ideas, entertain us with
+substances and beings no less extravagant and chimerical. Many
+Aristotelians have likewise spoken as unintelligibly of their
+substantial forms. I shall only instance Albertus Magnus, who, in
+his dissertation upon the loadstone, observing that fire will
+destroy its magnetic virtues, tells us that he took particular
+notice of one as it lay glowing amidst a heap of burning coals, and
+that he perceived a certain blue vapour to arise from it, which he
+believed might be the substantial form that is, in our West Indian
+phrase, the soul of the loadstone.
+
+There is a tradition among the Americans that one of their
+countrymen descended in a vision to the great repository of souls,
+or, as we call it here, to the other world; and that upon his return
+he gave his friends a distinct account of everything he saw among
+those regions of the dead. A friend of mine, whom I have formerly
+mentioned, prevailed upon one of the interpreters of the Indian
+kings to inquire of them, if possible, what tradition they have
+among them of this matter: which, as well as he could learn by
+those many questions which he asked them at several times, was in
+substance as follows:
+
+The visionary, whose name was Marraton, after having travelled for a
+long space under a hollow mountain, arrived at length on the
+confines of this world of spirits, but could not enter it by reason
+of a thick forest, made up of bushes, brambles, and pointed thorns,
+so perplexed and interwoven with one another that it was impossible
+to find a passage through it. Whilst he was looking about for some
+track or pathway that might be worn in any part of it, he saw a huge
+lion couched under the side of it, who kept his eye upon him in the
+same posture as when he watches for his prey. The Indian
+immediately started back, whilst the lion rose with a spring, and
+leaped towards him. Being wholly destitute of all other weapons, he
+stooped down to take up a huge stone in his hand, but, to his
+infinite surprise, grasped nothing, and found the supposed stone to
+be only the apparition of one. If he was disappointed on this side,
+he was as much pleased on the other, when he found the lion, which
+had seized on his left shoulder, had no power to hurt him, and was
+only the ghost of that ravenous creature which it appeared to be.
+He no sooner got rid of his impotent enemy, but he marched up to the
+wood, and, after having surveyed it for some time, endeavoured to
+press into one part of it that was a little thinner than the rest,
+when, again to his great surprise, he found the bushes made no
+resistance, but that he walked through briars and brambles with the
+same ease as through the open air, and, in short, that the whole
+wood was nothing else but a wood of shades. He immediately
+concluded that this huge thicket of thorns and brakes was designed
+as a kind of fence or quickset hedge to the ghosts it inclosed, and
+that probably their soft substances might be torn by these subtile
+points and prickles, which were too weak to make any impressions in
+flesh and blood. With this thought he resolved to travel through
+this intricate wood, when by degrees he felt a gale of perfumes
+breathing upon him, that grew stronger and sweeter in proportion as
+he advanced. He had not proceeded much further, when he observed
+the thorns and briers to end, and give place to a thousand beautiful
+green trees, covered with blossoms of the finest scents and colours,
+that formed a wilderness of sweets, and were a kind of lining to
+those ragged scenes which he had before passed through. As he was
+coming out of this delightful part of the wood, and entering upon
+the plains it enclosed, he saw several horsemen rushing by him, and
+a little while after heard the cry of a pack of dogs. He had not
+listened long before he saw the apparition of a milk-white steed,
+with a young man on the back of it, advancing upon full stretch
+after the souls of about a hundred beagles, that were hunting down
+the ghost of a hare, which ran away before them with an unspeakable
+swiftness. As the man on the milk-white steed came by him, he
+looked upon him very attentively, and found him to be the young
+prince Nicharagua, who died about half a year before, and, by reason
+of his great virtues, was at that time lamented over all the western
+parts of America.
+
+He had no sooner got out of the wood but he was entertained with
+such a landscape of flowery plains, green meadows, running streams,
+sunny hills, and shady vales as were not to be represented by his
+own expressions, nor, as he said, by the conceptions of others.
+This happy region was peopled with innumerable swarms of spirits,
+who applied themselves to exercises and diversions, according as
+their fancies led them. Some of them were tossing the figure of a
+quoit; others were pitching the shadow of a bar; others were
+breaking the apparition of a horse; and multitudes employing
+themselves upon ingenious handicrafts with the souls of departed
+utensils, for that is the name which in the Indian language they
+give their tools when they are burnt or broken. As he travelled
+through this delightful scene he was very often tempted to pluck the
+flowers that rose everywhere about him in the greatest variety and
+profusion, having never seen several of them in his own country:
+but he quickly found, that though they were objects of his sight,
+they were not liable to his touch. He at length came to the side of
+a great river, and, being a good fisherman himself, stood upon the
+banks of it some time to look upon an angler that had taken a great
+many shapes of fishes, which lay flouncing up and down by him.
+
+I should have told my reader that this Indian had been formerly
+married to one of the greatest beauties of his country, by whom he
+had several children. This couple were so famous for their love and
+constancy to one another that the Indians to this day, when they
+give a married man joy of his wife, wish that they may live together
+like Marraton and Yaratilda. Marraton had not stood long by the
+fisherman when he saw the shadow of his beloved Yaratilda, who had
+for some time fixed her eye upon him before he discovered her. Her
+arms were stretched out towards him; floods of tears ran down her
+eyes; her looks, her hands, her voice called him over to her, and,
+at the same time, seemed to tell him that the river was unpassable.
+Who can describe the passion made up of joy, sorrow, love, desire,
+astonishment that rose in the Indian upon the sight of his dear
+Yaratilda? He could express it by nothing but his tears, which ran
+like a river down his cheeks as he looked upon her. He had not
+stood in this posture long before he plunged into the stream that
+lay before him, and finding it to be nothing but the phantom of a
+river, stalked on the bottom of it till he arose on the other side.
+At his approach Yaratilda flew into his arms, whilst Marraton wished
+himself disencumbered of that body which kept her from his embraces.
+After many questions and endearments on both sides, she conducted
+him to a bower, which she had dressed with her own hands with all
+the ornaments that could be met with in those blooming regions. She
+had made it gay beyond imagination, and was every day adding
+something new to it. As Marraton stood astonished at the
+unspeakable beauty of her habitation, and ravished with the
+fragrancy that came from every part of it, Yaratilda told him that
+she was preparing this bower for his reception, as well knowing that
+his piety to his God, and his faithful dealing towards men, would
+certainly bring him to that happy place whenever his life should be
+at an end. She then brought two of her children to him, who died
+some years before, and resided with her in the same delightful
+bower, advising him to breed up those others which were still with
+him in such a manner that they might hereafter all of them meet
+together in this happy place.
+
+The tradition tells us further that he had afterwards a sight of
+those dismal habitations which are the portion of ill men after
+death; and mentions several molten seas of gold, in which were
+plunged the souls of barbarous Europeans, who put to the sword so
+many thousands of poor Indians for the sake of that precious metal.
+But having already touched upon the chief points of this tradition,
+and exceeded the measure of my paper, I shall not give any further
+account of it.
+
+
+
+SIX PAPERS ON WIT.
+
+
+
+Ut pictura poesis erit -
+HOR., Ars Poet. 361.
+
+Poems like pictures are.
+
+Nothing is so much admired, and so little understood, as wit. No
+author that I know of has written professedly upon it. As for those
+who make any mention of it, they only treat on the subject as it has
+accidentally fallen in their way, and that too in little short
+reflections, or in general declamatory flourishes, without entering
+into the bottom of the matter. I hope, therefore, I shall perform
+an acceptable work to my countrymen if I treat at large upon this
+subject; which I shall endeavour to do in a manner suitable to it,
+that I may not incur the censure which a famous critic bestows upon
+one who had written a treatise upon "the sublime," in a low
+grovelling style. I intend to lay aside a whole week for this
+undertaking, that the scheme of my thoughts may not be broken and
+interrupted; and I dare promise myself, if my readers will give me a
+week's attention, that this great city will be very much changed for
+the better by next Saturday night. I shall endeavour to make what I
+say intelligible to ordinary capacities; but if my readers meet with
+any paper that in some parts of it may be a little out of their
+reach, I would not have them discouraged, for they may assure
+themselves the next shall be much clearer.
+
+As the great and only end of these my speculations is to banish vice
+and ignorance out of the territories of Great Britain, I shall
+endeavour, as much as possible, to establish among us a taste of
+polite writing. It is with this view that I have endeavoured to set
+my readers right in several points relating to operas and tragedies,
+and shall, from time to time, impart my notions of comedy, as I
+think they may tend to its refinement and perfection. I find by my
+bookseller, that these papers of criticism, with that upon humour,
+have met with a more kind reception than indeed I could have hoped
+for from such subjects; for which reason I shall enter upon my
+present undertaking with greater cheerfulness.
+
+In this, and one or two following papers, I shall trace out the
+history of false wit, and distinguish the several kinds of it as
+they have prevailed in different ages of the world. This I think
+the more necessary at present, because I observed there were
+attempts on foot last winter to revive some of those antiquated
+modes of wit that have been long exploded out of the commonwealth of
+letters. There were several satires and panegyrics handed about in
+an acrostic, by which means some of the most arrant undisputed
+blockheads about the town began to entertain ambitious thoughts, and
+to set up for polite authors. I shall therefore describe at length
+those many arts of false wit, in which a writer does not show
+himself a man of a beautiful genius, but of great industry.
+
+The first species of false wit which I have met with is very
+venerable for its antiquity, and has produced several pieces which
+have lived very near as long as the "Iliad" itself: I mean, those
+short poems printed among the minor Greek poets, which resemble the
+figure of an egg, a pair of wings, an axe, a shepherd's pipe, and an
+altar.
+
+As for the first, it is a little oval poem, and may not improperly
+be called a scholar's egg. I would endeavour to hatch it, or, in
+more intelligible language, to translate it into English, did not I
+find the interpretation of it very difficult; for the author seems
+to have been more intent upon the figure of his poem than upon the
+sense of it.
+
+The pair of wings consists of twelve verses, or rather feathers,
+every verse decreasing gradually in its measure according to its
+situation in the wing. The subject of it, as in the rest of the
+poems which follow, bears some remote affinity with the figure, for
+it describes a god of love, who is always painted with wings.
+
+The axe, methinks, would have been a good figure for a lampoon, had
+the edge of it consisted of the most satirical parts of the work;
+but as it is in the original, I take it to have been nothing else
+but the poesy of an axe which was consecrated to Minerva, and was
+thought to be the same that Epeus made use of in the building of the
+Trojan horse; which is a hint I shall leave to the consideration of
+the critics. I am apt to think that the poesy was written
+originally upon the axe, like those which our modern cutlers
+inscribe upon their knives; and that, therefore, the poesy still
+remains in its ancient shape, though the axe itself is lost.
+
+The shepherd's pipe may be said to be full of music, for it is
+composed of nine different kinds of verses, which by their several
+lengths resemble the nine stops of the old musical instrument, that
+is likewise the subject of the poem.
+
+The altar is inscribed with the epitaph of Troilus the son of
+Hecuba; which, by the way, makes me believe that these false pieces
+of wit are much more ancient than the authors to whom they are
+generally ascribed; at least, I will never be persuaded that so fine
+a writer as Theocritus could have been the author of any such simple
+works.
+
+It was impossible for a man to succeed in these performances who was
+not a kind of painter, or at least a designer. He was first of all
+to draw the outline of the subject which he intended to write upon,
+and afterwards conform the description to the figure of his subject.
+The poetry was to contract or dilate itself according to the mould
+in which it was cast. In a word, the verses were to be cramped or
+extended to the dimensions of the frame that was prepared for them;
+and to undergo the fate of those persons whom the tyrant Procrustes
+used to lodge in his iron bed: if they were too short, he stretched
+them on a rack; and if they were too long, chopped off a part of
+their legs, till they fitted the couch which he had prepared for
+them.
+
+Mr. Dryden hints at this obsolete kind of wit in one of the
+following verses in his "Mac Flecknoe;" which an English reader
+cannot understand, who does not know that there are those little
+poems above mentioned in the shape of wings and altars:-
+
+
+- Choose for thy command
+Some peaceful province in acrostic land;
+
+There may'st thou wings display, and altars raise,
+And torture one poor word a thousand ways.
+
+
+This fashion of false wit was revived by several poets of the last
+age, and in particular may be met with among Mr. Herbert's poems;
+and, if I am not mistaken, in the translation of Du Bartas. I do
+not remember any other kind of work among the moderns which more
+resembles the performances I have mentioned than that famous picture
+of King Charles the First, which has the whole Book of Psalms
+written in the lines of the face, and, the hair of the head. When I
+was last at Oxford I perused one of the whiskers, and was reading
+the other, but could not go so far in it as I would have done, by
+reason of the impatience of my friends and fellow-travellers, who
+all of them pressed to see such a piece of curiosity. I have since
+heard, that there is now an eminent writing-master in town, who has
+transcribed all the Old Testament in a full-bottomed periwig: and
+if the fashion should introduce the thick kind of wigs which were in
+vogue some few years ago, he promises to add two or three
+supernumerary locks that should contain all the Apocrypha. He
+designed this wig originally for King William, having disposed of
+the two Books of Kings in the two forks of the foretop; but that
+glorious monarch dying before the wig was finished, there is a space
+left in it for the face of any one that has a mind to purchase it.
+
+But to return to our ancient poems in picture. I would humbly
+propose, for the benefit of our modern smatterers in poetry, that
+they would imitate their brethren among the ancients in those
+ingenious devices. I have communicated this thought to a young
+poetical lover of my acquaintance, who intends to present his
+mistress with a copy of verses made in the shape of her fan; and, if
+he tells me true, has already finished the three first sticks of it.
+He has likewise promised me to get the measure of his mistress's
+marriage finger with a design to make a posy in the fashion of a
+ring, which shall exactly fit it. It is so very easy to enlarge
+upon a good hint, that I do not question but my ingenious readers
+will apply what I have said to many other particulars; and that we
+shall see the town filled in a very little time with poetical
+tippets, handkerchiefs, snuff-boxes, and the like female ornaments.
+I shall therefore conclude with a word of advice to those admirable
+English authors who call themselves Pindaric writers, that they
+would apply themselves to this kind of wit without loss of time, as
+being provided better than any other poets with verses of all sizes
+and dimensions.
+
+
+
+NEXT ESSAY
+
+
+
+Operose nihil aguat.
+SENECA.
+
+Busy about nothing.
+
+There is nothing more certain than that every man would be a wit if
+he could; and notwithstanding pedants of pretended depth and
+solidity are apt to decry the writings of a polite author, as flash
+and froth, they all of them show, upon occasion, that they would
+spare no pains to arrive at the character of those whom they seem to
+despise. For this reason we often find them endeavouring at works
+of fancy, which cost them infinite pangs in the production. The
+truth of it is, a man had better be a galley-slave than a wit, were
+one to gain that title by those elaborate trifles which have been
+the inventions of such authors as were often masters of great
+learning, but no genius.
+
+In my last paper I mentioned some of these false wits among the
+ancients; and in this shall give the reader two or three other
+species of them, that flourished in the same early ages of the
+world. The first I shall produce are the lipogrammatists or letter-
+droppers of antiquity, that would take an exception, without any
+reason, against some particular letter in the alphabet, so as not to
+admit it once into a whole poem. One Tryphiodorus was a great
+master in this kind of writing. He composed an "Odyssey" or epic
+poem on the adventures of Ulysses, consisting of four-and-twenty
+books, having entirely banished the letter A from his first book,
+which was called Alpha, as lucus a non lucendo, because there was
+not an Alpha in it. His second book was inscribed Beta for the same
+reason. In short, the poet excluded the whole four-and-twenty
+letters in their turns, and showed them, one after another, that he
+could do his business without them.
+
+It must have been very pleasant to have seen this poet avoiding the
+reprobate letter, as much as another would a false quantity, and
+making his escape from it through the several Greek dialects, when
+he was pressed with it in any particular syllable. For the most apt
+and elegant word in the whole language was rejected, like a diamond
+with a flaw in it, if it appeared blemished with a wrong letter. I
+shall only observe upon this head, that if the work I have here
+mentioned had been now extant, the "Odyssey" of Tryphiodorus, in all
+probability, would have been oftener quoted by our learned pedants
+than the "Odyssey" of Homer. What a perpetual fund would it have
+been of obsolete words and phrases, unusual barbarisms and
+rusticities, absurd spellings and complicated dialects! I make no
+question but that it would have been looked upon as one of the most
+valuable treasuries of the Greek tongue.
+
+I find likewise among the ancients that ingenious kind of conceit
+which the moderns distinguish by the name of a rebus, that does not
+sink a letter, but a whole word, by substituting a picture in its
+place. When Caesar was one of the masters of the Roman mint, he
+placed the figure of an elephant upon the reverse of the public
+money; the word Caesar signifying an elephant in the Punic language.
+This was artificially contrived by Caesar, because it was not lawful
+for a private man to stamp his own figure upon the coin of the
+commonwealth. Cicero, who was so called from the founder of his
+family, that was marked on the nose with a little wen like a vetch,
+which is Cicer in Latin, instead of Marcus Tullius Cicero, ordered
+the words Marcus Tullius, with a figure of a vetch at the end of
+them, to be inscribed on a public monument. This was done probably
+to show that he was neither ashamed of his name nor family,
+notwithstanding the envy of his competitors had often reproached him
+with both. In the same manner we read of a famous building that was
+marked in several parts of it with the figures of a frog and a
+lizard; those words in Greek having been the names of the
+architects, who by the laws of their country were never permitted to
+inscribe their own names upon their works. For the same reason it
+is thought that the forelock of the horse, in the antique equestrian
+statue of Marcus Aurelius, represents at a distance the shape of an
+owl, to intimate the country of the statuary, who, in all
+probability, was an Athenian. This kind of wit was very much in
+vogue among our own countrymen about an age or two ago, who did not
+practise it for any oblique reason, as the ancients above-mentioned,
+but purely for the sake of being witty. Among innumerable instances
+that may be given of this nature, I shall produce the device of one
+Mr. Newberry, as I find it mentioned by our learned Camden in his
+Remains. Mr. Newberry, to represent his name by a picture, hung up
+at his door the sign of a yew-tree, that has several berries upon
+it, and in the midst of them a great golden N hung upon a bough of
+the tree, which by the help of a little false spelling made up the
+word Newberry.
+
+I shall conclude this topic with a rebus, which has been lately hewn
+out in freestone, and erected over two of the portals of Blenheim
+House, being the figure of a monstrous lion tearing to pieces a
+little cock. For the better understanding of which device I must
+acquaint my English reader that a cock has the misfortune to be
+called in Latin by the same word that signifies a Frenchman, as a
+lion is the emblem of the English nation. Such a device in so noble
+a pile of building looks like a pun in an heroic poem; and I am very
+sorry the truly ingenious architect would suffer the statuary to
+blemish his excellent plan with so poor a conceit. But I hope what
+I have said will gain quarter for the cock, and deliver him out of
+the lion's paw.
+
+I find likewise in ancient times the conceit of making an echo talk
+sensibly, and give rational answers. If this could be excusable in
+any writer, it would be in Ovid where he introduces the Echo as a
+nymph, before she was worn away into nothing but a voice. The
+learned Erasmus, though a man of wit and genius, has composed a
+dialogue upon this silly kind of device, and made use of an Echo,
+who seems to have been a very extraordinary linguist, for she
+answers the person she talks with in Latin, Greek, and Hebrew,
+according as she found the syllables which she was to repeat in any
+of those learned languages. Hudibras, in ridicule of this false
+kind of wit, has described Bruin bewailing the loss of his bear to
+the solitary Echo, who is of great use to the poet in several
+distiches, as she does not only repeat after him, but helps out his
+verse, and furnishes him with rhymes:-
+
+
+He raged, and kept as heavy a coil as
+Stout Hercules for loss of Hylas;
+Forcing the valleys to repeat
+The accents of his sad regret;
+He beat his breast, and tore his hair,
+For loss of his dear crony bear:
+That Echo from the hollow ground
+His doleful wailings did resound
+More wistfully by many times,
+Than in small poets' splay-foot rhymes,
+That make her, in their rueful stories,
+To answer to int'rogatories,
+And most unconscionably depose
+Things of which she nothing knows;
+And when she has said all she can say,
+'Tis wrested to the lover's fancy.
+Quoth he, "O whither, wicked Bruin,
+Art thou fled to my"--Echo, Ruin?
+"I thought th' hadst scorn'd to budge a step
+For fear." Quoth Echo, Marry guep.
+"Am I not here to take thy part?"
+Then what has quell'd thy stubborn heart?
+Have these bones rattled, and this head
+So often in thy quarrel bled?
+Nor did I ever winch or grudge it,
+For thy dear sake." Quoth she, Mum budget.
+Think'st thou 'twill not be laid i' th' dish,
+Thou turn'dst thy back?" Quoth Echo, Pish.
+To run from those th' hadst overcome
+Thus cowardly?" Quoth Echo, Mum.
+"But what a-vengeance makes thee fly
+From me too as thine enemy?
+Or if thou hadst no thought of me,
+Nor what I have endured for thee,
+Yet shame and honour might prevail
+To keep thee thus from turning tail:
+For who would grudge to spend his blood in
+His honour's cause?" Quoth she, A pudding.
+
+Part I., Cant. 3, 183.
+
+
+
+NEXT ESSAY
+
+
+
+Hoc est quod palles? Cur quis non prandeat, hoc est?
+PERS., Sat. iii. 85.
+
+Is it for this you gain those meagre looks,
+And sacrifice your dinner to your books?
+
+Several kinds of false wit that vanished in the refined ages of the
+world, discovered themselves again in the times of monkish
+ignorance.
+
+As the monks were the masters of all that little learning which was
+then extant, and had their whole lives entirely disengaged from
+business, it is no wonder that several of them, who wanted genius
+for higher performances, employed many hours in the composition of
+such tricks in writing as required much time and little capacity. I
+have seen half the "AEneid" turned into Latin rhymes by one of the
+beaux esprits of that dark age: who says, in his preface to it,
+that the "AEneid" wanted nothing but the sweets of rhyme to make it
+the most perfect work in its kind. I have likewise seen a hymn in
+hexameters to the Virgin Mary, which filled a whole book, though it
+consisted but of the eight following words
+
+
+Tot tibi sunt, Virgo, dotes, quot sidera coelo.
+Thou hast as many virtues, O Virgin, as there are stars in heaven.
+
+
+The poet rang the changes upon these eight several words, and by
+that means made his verses almost as numerous as the virtues and
+stars which they celebrated. It is no wonder that men who had so
+much time upon their hands did not only restore all the antiquated
+pieces of false wit, but enriched the world with inventions of their
+own. It is to this age that we owe the production of anagrams,
+which is nothing else but a transmutation of one word into another,
+or the turning of the same set of letters into different words;
+which may change night into day, or black into white, if chance, who
+is the goddess that presides over these sorts of composition, shall
+so direct. I remember a witty author, in allusion to this kind of
+writing, calls his rival, who, it seems, was distorted, and had his
+limbs set in places that did not properly belong to them, "the
+anagram of a man."
+
+When the anagrammatist takes a name to work upon, he considers it at
+first as a mine not broken up, which will not show the treasure it
+contains till he shall have spent many hours in the search of it;
+for it is his business to find out one word that conceals itself in
+another, and to examine the letters in all the variety of stations
+in which they can possibly be ranged. I have heard of a gentleman
+who, when this kind of wit was in fashion, endeavoured to gain his
+mistress's heart by it. She was one of the finest women of her age,
+and known by the name of the Lady Mary Boon. The lover not being
+able to make anything of Mary, by certain liberties indulged to this
+kind of writing converted it into Moll; and after having shut
+himself up for half a year, with indefatigable industry produced an
+anagram. Upon the presenting it to his mistress, who was a little
+vexed in her heart to see herself degraded into Moll Boon, she told
+him, to his infinite surprise, that he had mistaken her surname, for
+that it was not Boon, but Bohun.
+
+
+- Ibi omnis
+Effusus labor.--
+
+
+The lover was thunder-struck with his misfortune, insomuch that in a
+little time after he lost his senses, which, indeed, had been very
+much impaired by that continual application he had given to his
+anagram.
+
+The acrostic was probably invented about the same time with the
+anagram, though it is impossible to decide whether the inventor of
+the one or the other were the greater blockhead. The simple
+acrostic is nothing but the name or title of a person, or thing,
+made out of the initial letters of several verses, and by that means
+written, after the manner of the Chinese, in a perpendicular line.
+But besides these there are compound acrostics, when the principal
+letters stand two or three deep. I have seen some of them where the
+verses have not only been edged by a name at each extremity, but
+have had the same name running down like a seam through the middle
+of the poem.
+
+There is another near relation of the anagrams and acrostics, which
+is commonly called a chronogram. This kind of wit appears very
+often on many modern medals, especially those of Germany, when they
+represent in the inscription the year in which they were coined.
+Thus we see on a medal of Gustavus Adolphus time following words,
+CHRISTVS DUX ERGO TRIVMPHVS. If you take the pains to pick the
+figures out of the several words, and range them in their proper
+order, you will find they amount to MDCXVVVII, or 1627, the year in
+which the medal was stamped: for as some of the letters distinguish
+themselves from the rest, and overtop their fellows, they are to be
+considered in a double capacity, both as letters and as figures.
+Your laborious German wits will turn over a whole dictionary for one
+of these ingenious devices. A man would think they were searching
+after an apt classical term, but instead of that they are looking
+out a word that has an L, an M, or a D in it. When, therefore, we
+meet with any of these inscriptions, we are not so much to look in
+them for the thought, as for the year of the Lord.
+
+The bouts-rimes were the favourites of the French nation for a whole
+age together, and that at a time when it abounded in wit and
+learning. They were a list of words that rhyme to one another,
+drawn up by another hand, and given to a poet, who was to make a
+poem to the rhymes in the same order that they were placed upon the
+list: the more uncommon the rhymes were, the more extraordinary was
+the genius of the poet that could accommodate his verses to them. I
+do not know any greater instance of the decay of wit and learning
+among the French, which generally follows the declension of empire,
+than the endeavouring to restore this foolish kind of wit. If the
+reader will be at trouble to see examples of it, let him look into
+the new Mercure Gallant, where the author every month gives a list
+of rhymes to be filled up by the ingenious, in order to be
+communicated to the public in the Mercure for the succeeding month.
+That for the month of November last, which now lies before me, is as
+follows
+
+
+Lauriers
+Guerriers
+Musette
+Lisette
+Caesars
+Etendars
+Houlette
+Folette
+
+
+One would be amazed to see so learned a man as Menage talking
+seriously on this kind of trifle in the following passage:-
+
+"Monsieur de la Chambre has told me that he never knew what he was
+going to write when he took his pen into his hand; but that one
+sentence always produced another. For my own part, I never knew
+what I should write next when I was making verses. In the first
+place I got all my rhymes together, and was afterwards perhaps three
+or four months in filling them up. I one day showed Monsieur
+Gombaud a composition of this nature, in which, among others, I had
+made use of the four following rhymes, Amaryllis, Phyllis, Maine,
+Arne; desiring him to give me his opinion of it. He told me
+immediately that my verses were good for nothing. And upon my
+asking his reason, he said, because the rhymes are too common, and
+for that reason easy to be put into verse. 'Marry,' says I, 'if it
+be so, I am very well rewarded for all the pains I have been at!'
+But by Monsieur Gombaud's leave, notwithstanding the severity of the
+criticism, the verses were good." (Vide "Menagiana.") Thus far the
+learned Menage, whom I have translated word for word.
+
+The first occasion of these bouts-rimes made them in some manner
+excusable, as they were tasks which the French ladies used to impose
+on their lovers. But when a grave author, like him above-mentioned,
+tasked himself, could there be anything more ridiculous? Or would
+not one be apt to believe that the author played booty, and did not
+make his list of rhymes till he had finished his poem?
+
+I shall only add that this piece of false wit has been finely
+ridiculed by Monsieur Sarasin, in a poem entitled "La Defaite des
+Bouts-Rimes." (The Rout of the Bouts-Rimes).
+
+I must subjoin to this last kind of wit the double rhymes, which are
+used in doggrel poetry, and generally applauded by ignorant readers.
+If the thought of the couplet in such compositions is good, the
+rhyme adds little to it; and if bad, it will not be in the power of
+the rhyme to recommend it. I am afraid that great numbers of those
+who admire the incomparable "Hudibras," do it more on account of
+these doggrel rhymes than of the parts that really deserve
+admiration. I am sure I have heard the
+
+
+Pulpit, drum ecclesiastic,
+Was beat with fist, instead of a stick (Canto I, II),
+
+and--
+
+
+There was an ancient philosopher
+Who had read Alexander Ross over
+(Part I., Canto 2, 1),
+
+
+more frequently quoted than the finest pieces of wit in the whole
+poem.
+
+
+
+NEXT ESSAY
+
+
+
+Non equidem hoc studeo bullatis ut mihi nugis
+Pagina turgescat, dare pondus idonea fumo.
+PERS., Sat. v. 19.
+
+'Tis not indeed my talent to engage
+In lofty trifles, or to swell my page
+With wind and noise.
+DRYDEN.
+
+There is no kind of false wit which has been so recommended by the
+practice of all ages as that which consists in a jingle of words,
+and is comprehended under the general name of punning. It is indeed
+impossible to kill a weed which the soil has a natural disposition
+to produce. The seeds of punning are in the minds of all men, and
+though they may be subdued by reason, reflection, and good sense,
+they will be very apt to shoot up in the greatest genius that is not
+broken and cultivated by the rules of art. Imitation is natural to
+us, and when it does not raise the mind to poetry, painting, music,
+or other more noble arts, it often breaks out in puns and quibbles.
+
+Aristotle, in the eleventh chapter of his book of rhetoric,
+describes two or three kinds of puns, which he calls paragrams,
+among the beauties of good writing, and produces instances of them
+out of some of the greatest authors in the Greek tongue. Cicero has
+sprinkled several of his works with puns, and, in his book where he
+lays down the rules of oratory, quotes abundance of sayings as
+pieces of wit, which also, upon examination, prove arrant puns. But
+the age in which the pun chiefly flourished was in the reign of King
+James the First. That learned monarch was himself a tolerable
+punster, and made very few bishops or Privy Councillors that had not
+some time or other signalised themselves by a clinch, or a
+conundrum. It was, therefore, in this age that the pun appeared
+with pomp and dignity. It had been before admitted into merry
+speeches and ludicrous compositions, but was now delivered with
+great gravity from the pulpit, or pronounced in the most solemn
+manner at the council-table. The greatest authors, in their most
+serious works, made frequent use of puns. The sermons of Bishop
+Andrews, and the tragedies of Shakespeare, are full of them. The
+sinner was punned into repentance by the former; as in the latter,
+nothing is more usual than to see a hero weeping and quibbling for a
+dozen lines together.
+
+I must add to these great authorities, which seem to have given a
+kind of sanction to this piece of false wit, that all the writers of
+rhetoric have treated of punning with very great respect, and
+divided the several kinds of it into hard names, that are reckoned
+among the figures of speech, and recommended as ornaments in
+discourse. I remember a country schoolmaster of my acquaintance
+told me once, that he had been in company with a gentleman whom he
+looked upon to be the greatest paragrammatist among the moderns.
+Upon inquiry, I found my learned friend had dined that day with Mr.
+Swan, the famous punster; and desiring him to give me some account
+of Mr. Swan's conversation, he told me that he generally talked in
+the Paranomasia, that he sometimes gave in to the Ploce, but that in
+his humble opinion he shone most in the Antanaclasis.
+
+I must not here omit that a famous university of this land was
+formerly very much infested with puns; but whether or not this might
+arise from the fens and marshes in which it was situated, and which
+are now drained, I must leave to the determination of more skilful
+naturalists.
+
+After this short history of punning, one would wonder how it should
+be so entirely banished out of the learned world as it is at
+present, especially since it had found a place in the writings of
+the most ancient polite authors. To account for this we must
+consider that the first race of authors, who were the great heroes
+in writing, were destitute of all rules and arts of criticism; and
+for that reason, though they excel later writers in greatness of
+genius, they fall short of them in accuracy and correctness. The
+moderns cannot reach their beauties, but can avoid their
+imperfections. When the world was furnished with these authors of
+the first eminence, there grew up another set of writers, who gained
+themselves a reputation by the remarks which they made on the works
+of those who preceded them. It was one of the employments of these
+secondary authors to distinguish the several kinds of wit by terms
+of art, and to consider them as more or less perfect, according as
+they were founded in truth. It is no wonder, therefore, that even
+such authors as Isocrates, Plato, and Cicero, should have such
+little blemishes as are not to be met with in authors of a much
+inferior character, who have written since those several blemishes
+were discovered. I do not find that there was a proper separation
+made between puns and true wit by any of the ancient authors, except
+Quintilian and Longinus. But when this distinction was once
+settled, it was very natural for all men of sense to agree in it.
+As for the revival of this false wit, it happened about the time of
+the revival of letters; but as soon as it was once detected, it
+immediately vanished and disappeared. At the same time there is no
+question but, as it has sunk in one age and rose in another, it will
+again recover itself in some distant period of time, as pedantry and
+ignorance shall prevail upon wit and sense. And, to speak the
+truth, I do very much apprehend, by some of the last winter's
+productions, which had their sets of admirers, that our posterity
+will in a few years degenerate into a race of punsters: at least, a
+man may be very excusable for any apprehensions of this kind, that
+has seen acrostics handed about the town with great secresy and
+applause; to which I must also add a little epigram called the
+"Witches' Prayer," that fell into verse when it was read either
+backward or forward, excepting only that it cursed one way, and
+blessed the other. When one sees there are actually such
+painstakers among our British wits, who can tell what it may end in?
+If we must lash one another, let it be with the manly strokes of wit
+and satire: for I am of the old philosopher's opinion, that, if I
+must suffer from one or the other, I would rather it should be from
+the paw of a lion than from the hoof of an ass. I do not speak this
+out of any spirit of party. There is a most crying dulness on both
+sides. I have seen Tory acrostics and Whig anagrams, and do not
+quarrel with either of them because they are Whigs or Tories, but
+because they are anagrams and acrostics.
+
+But to return to punning. Having pursued the history of a pun, from
+its original to its downfall, I shall here define it to be a conceit
+arising from the use of two words that agree in the sound, but
+differ in the sense. The only way, therefore, to try a piece of wit
+is to translate it into a different language. If it bears the test,
+you may pronounce it true; but if it vanishes in the experiment, you
+may conclude it to have been a pun. In short, one may say of a pun,
+as the countryman described his nightingale, that it is "vox et
+praeterea nihil"--"a sound, and nothing but a sound." On the
+contrary, one may represent true wit by the description which
+Aristaenetus makes of a fine woman:- "When she is dressed she is
+beautiful: when she is undressed she is beautiful;" or, as Mercerus
+has translated it more emphatically, Induitur, formosa est:
+exuitur, ipsa forma est.
+
+
+
+NEXT ESSAY
+
+
+
+Scribendi recte sapere est et principium, et fons.
+HOR., Ars Poet. 309.
+
+Sound judgment is the ground of writing well.--ROSCOMMON.
+
+Mr. Locke has an admirable reflection upon the difference of wit and
+judgment, whereby he endeavours to show the reason why they are not
+always the talents of the same person. His words are as follow:-
+"And hence, perhaps, may be given some reason of that common
+observation, 'That men who have a great deal of wit, and prompt
+memories, have not always the clearest judgment or deepest reason.'
+For wit lying most in the assemblage of ideas, and putting those
+together with quickness and variety wherein can be found any
+resemblance or congruity, thereby to make up pleasant pictures and
+agreeable visions in the fancy: judgment, on the contrary, lies
+quite on the other side, in separating carefully one from another,
+ideas wherein can be found the least difference, thereby to avoid
+being misled by similitude, and by affinity to take one thing for
+another. This is a way of proceeding quite contrary to metaphor and
+allusion, wherein, for the most part, lies that entertainment and
+pleasantry of wit which strikes so lively on the fancy, and is
+therefore so acceptable to all people."
+
+This is, I think, the best and most philosophical account that I
+have ever met with of wit, which generally, though not always,
+consists in such a resemblance and congruity of ideas as this author
+mentions. I shall only add to it, by way of explanation, that every
+resemblance of ideas is not that which we call wit, unless it be
+such an one that gives delight and surprise to the reader. These
+two properties seem essential to wit, more particularly the last of
+them. In order, therefore, that the resemblance in the ideas be
+wit, it is necessary that the ideas should not lie too near one
+another in the nature of things; for, where the likeness is obvious,
+it gives no surprise. To compare one man's singing to that of
+another, or to represent the whiteness of any object by that of milk
+and snow, or the variety of its colours by those of the rainbow,
+cannot be called wit, unless, besides this obvious resemblance,
+there be some further congruity discovered in the two ideas that is
+capable of giving the reader some surprise. Thus, when a poet tells
+us the bosom of his mistress is as white as snow, there is no wit in
+the comparison; but when he adds, with a sigh, it is as cold too, it
+then grows into wit. Every reader's memory may supply him with
+innumerable instances of the same nature. For this reason, the
+similitudes in heroic poets, who endeavour rather to fill the mind
+with great conceptions than to divert it with such as are new and
+surprising, have seldom anything in them that can be called wit.
+Mr. Locke's account of wit, with this short explanation, comprehends
+most of the species of wit, as metaphors, similitudes, allegories,
+enigmas, mottoes, parables, fables, dreams, visions, dramatic
+writings, burlesque, and all the methods of allusion: as there are
+many other pieces of wit, how remote soever they may appear at first
+sight from the foregoing description, which upon examination will be
+found to agree with it.
+
+As true wit generally consists in this resemblance and congruity of
+ideas, false wit chiefly consists in the resemblance and congruity
+sometimes of single letters, as in anagrams, chronograms, lipograms,
+and acrostics; sometimes of syllables, as in echoes and doggrel
+rhymes; sometimes of words, as in puns and quibbles; and sometimes
+of whole sentences or poems, cast into the figures of eggs, axes, or
+altars; nay, some carry the notion of wit so far as to ascribe it
+even to external mimicry, and to look upon a man as an ingenious
+person that can resemble the tone, posture, or face of another.
+
+As true wit consists in the resemblance of ideas, and false wit in
+the resemblance of words, according to the foregoing instances,
+there is another kind of wit which consists partly in the
+resemblance of ideas and partly in the resemblance of words, which
+for distinction sake I shall call mixed wit. This kind of wit is
+that which abounds in Cowley more than in any author that ever
+wrote. Mr. Waller has likewise a great deal of it. Mr. Dryden is
+very sparing in it. Milton had a genius much above it. Spenser is
+in the same class with Milton. The Italians, even in their epic
+poetry, are full of it. Monsieur Boileau, who formed himself upon
+the ancient poets, has everywhere rejected it with scorn. If we
+look after mixed wit among the Greek writers, we shall find it
+nowhere but in the epigrammatists. There are indeed some strokes of
+it in the little poem ascribed to Musaeus, which by that as well as
+many other marks betrays itself to be a modern composition. If we
+look into the Latin writers we find none of this mixed wit in
+Virgil, Lucretius, or Catullus; very little in Horace, but a great
+deal of it in Ovid, and scarce anything else in Martial.
+
+Out of the innumerable branches of mixed wit, I shall choose one
+instance which may be met with in all the writers of this class.
+The passion of love in its nature has been thought to resemble fire,
+for which reason the words "fire" and "flame" are made use of to
+signify love. The witty poets, therefore, have taken an advantage,
+from the doubtful meaning of the word "fire," to make an infinite
+number of witticisms. Cowley observing the cold regard of his
+mistress's eyes, and at the same time the power of producing love in
+him, considers them as burning-glasses made of ice; and, finding
+himself able to live in the greatest extremities of love, concludes
+the torrid zone to be habitable. When his mistress has read his
+letter written in juice of lemon, by holding it to the fire, he
+desires her to read it over a second time by love's flames. When
+she weeps, he wishes it were inward heat that distilled those drops
+from the limbec. When she is absent, he is beyond eighty, that is,
+thirty degrees nearer the pole than when she is with him. His
+ambitious love is a fire that naturally mounts upwards; his happy
+love is the beams of heaven, and his unhappy love flames of hell.
+When it does not let him sleep, it is a flame that sends up no
+smoke; when it is opposed by counsel and advice, it is a fire that
+rages the more by the winds blowing upon it. Upon the dying of a
+tree, in which he had cut his loves, he observes that his written
+flames had burnt up and withered the tree. When he resolves to give
+over his passion, he tells us that one burnt like him for ever
+dreads the fire. His heart is an AEtna, that, instead of Vulcan's
+shop, encloses Cupid's forge in it. His endeavouring to drown his
+love in wine is throwing oil upon the fire. He would insinuate to
+his mistress that the fire of love, like that of the sun, which
+produces so many living creatures, should not only warm, but beget.
+Love in another place cooks Pleasure at his fire. Sometimes the
+poet's heart is frozen in every breast, and sometimes scorched in
+every eye. Sometimes he is drowned in tears and burnt in love, like
+a ship set on fire in the middle of the sea.
+
+The reader may observe in every one of these instances that the poet
+mixes the qualities of fire with those of love; and in the same
+sentence, speaking of it both as a passion and as real fire,
+surprises the reader with those seeming resemblances or
+contradictions that make up all the wit in this kind of writing.
+Mixed wit, therefore, is a composition of pun and true wit, and is
+more or less perfect as the resemblance lies in the ideas or in the
+words. Its foundations are laid partly in falsehood and partly in
+truth; reason puts in her claim for one half of it, and extravagance
+for the other. The only province, therefore, for this kind of wit
+is epigram, or those little occasional poems that in their own
+nature are nothing else but a tissue of epigrams. I cannot conclude
+this head of mixed wit without owning that the admirable poet, out
+of whom I have taken the examples of it, had as much true wit as any
+author that ever wrote; and indeed all other talents of an
+extraordinary genius.
+
+It may be expected, since I am upon this subject, that I should take
+notice of Mr. Dryden's definition of wit, which, with all the
+deference that is due to the judgment of so great a man, is not so
+properly a definition of wit as of good writing in general. Wit, as
+he defines it, is "a propriety of words and thoughts adapted to the
+subject." If this be a true definition of wit, I am apt to think
+that Euclid was the greatest wit that ever set pen to paper. It is
+certain there never was a greater propriety of words and thoughts
+adapted to the subject than what that author has made use of in his
+Elements. I shall only appeal to my reader if this definition
+agrees with any notion he has of wit. If it be a true one, I am
+sure Mr. Dryden was not only a better poet, but a greater wit than
+Mr. Cowley, and Virgil a much more facetious man than either Ovid or
+Martial.
+
+Bouhours, whom I look upon to be the most penetrating of all the
+French critics, has taken pains to show that it is impossible for
+any thought to be beautiful which is not just, and has not its
+foundation in the nature of things; that the basis of all wit is
+truth; and that no thought can be valuable of which good sense is
+not the groundwork. Boileau has endeavoured to inculcate the same
+notion in several parts of his writings, both in prose and verse.
+This is that natural way of writing, that beautiful simplicity which
+we so much admire in the compositions of the ancients, and which
+nobody deviates from but those who want strength of genius to make a
+thought shine in its own natural beauties. Poets who want this
+strength of genius to give that majestic simplicity to nature, which
+we so much admire in the works of the ancients, are forced to hunt
+after foreign ornaments, and not to let any piece of wit of what
+kind soever escape them. I look upon these writers as Goths in
+poetry, who, like those in architecture, not being able to come up
+to the beautiful simplicity of the old Greeks and Romans, have
+endeavoured to supply its place with all the extravagancies of an
+irregular fancy. Mr. Dryden makes a very handsome observation on
+Ovid's writing a letter from Dido to AEneas, in the following words:
+"Ovid," says he, speaking of Virgil's fiction of Dido and AEneas,
+"takes it up after him, even in the same age, and makes an ancient
+heroine of Virgil's new-created Dido; dictates a letter for her just
+before her death to the ungrateful fugitive, and, very unluckily for
+himself, is for measuring a sword with a man so much superior in
+force to him on the same subject. I think I may be judge of this,
+because I have translated both. The famous author of 'The Art of
+Love' has nothing of his own; he borrows all from a greater master
+in his own profession, and, which is worse, improves nothing which
+he finds. Nature fails him; and, being forced to his old shift, he
+has recourse to witticism. This passes indeed with his soft
+admirers, and gives him the preference to Virgil in their esteem."
+
+Were not I supported by so great an authority as that of Mr. Dryden,
+I should not venture to observe that the taste of most of our
+English poets, as well as readers, is extremely Gothic. He quotes
+Monsieur Segrais for a threefold distinction of the readers of
+poetry; in the first of which he comprehends the rabble of readers,
+whom he does not treat as such with regard to their quality, but to
+their numbers and the coarseness of their taste. His words are as
+follows: "Segrais has distinguished the readers of poetry,
+according to their capacity of judging, into three classes." [He
+might have said the same of writers too if he had pleased.] "In the
+lowest form he places those whom he calls Les Petits Esprits, such
+things as our upper-gallery audience in a playhouse, who like
+nothing but the husk and rind of wit, and prefer a quibble, a
+conceit, an epigram, before solid sense and elegant expression.
+These are mob readers. If Virgil and Martial stood for Parliament-
+men, we know already who would carry it. But though they made the
+greatest appearance in the field, and cried the loudest, the best of
+it is they are but a sort of French Huguenots, or Dutch boors,
+brought over in herds, but not naturalised: who have not lands of
+two pounds per annum in Parnassus, and therefore are not privileged
+to poll. Their authors are of the same level, fit to represent them
+on a mountebank's stage, or to be masters of the ceremonies in a
+bear-garden; yet these are they who have the most admirers. But it
+often happens, to their mortification, that as their readers improve
+their stock of sense, as they may by reading better books, and by
+conversation with men of judgment, they soon forsake them."
+
+I must not dismiss this subject without observing that, as Mr.
+Locke, in the passage above-mentioned, has discovered the most
+fruitful source of wit, so there is another of a quite contrary
+nature to it, which does likewise branch itself into several kinds.
+For not only the resemblance, but the opposition of ideas does very
+often produce wit, as I could show in several little points, turns,
+and antitheses that I may possibly enlarge upon in some future
+speculation.
+
+
+
+NEXT ESSAY
+
+
+
+Humano capiti cervicem pictor equinam
+Jungere si velit, et varias inducere plumas,
+Undique collatis membris, ut turpiter atrum
+Desinat in piscem mulier formosa superne;
+Spectatum admissi risum teneatis, amici?
+Credite, Pisones, isti tabulae, fore librum
+Persimilem, cujus, velut aegri somnia, vanae
+Fingentur species.
+HOR., Ars Poet. 1.
+
+If in a picture, Piso, you should see
+A handsome woman with a fish's tail,
+Or a man's head upon a horse's neck,
+Or limbs of beasts, of the most different kinds,
+Cover'd with feathers of all sorts of birds, -
+Would you not laugh, and think the painter mad?
+Trust me, that book is as ridiculous
+Whose incoherent style, like sick men's dreams,
+Varies all shapes, and mixes all extremes.
+ROSCOMMON.
+
+
+It is very hard for the mind to disengage itself from a subject in
+which it has been long employed. The thoughts will be rising of
+themselves from time to time, though we give them no encouragement:
+as the tossings and fluctuations of the sea continue several hours
+after the winds are laid.
+
+It is to this that I impute my last night's dream or vision, which
+formed into one continued allegory the several schemes of wit,
+whether false, mixed, or true, that have been the subject of my late
+papers.
+
+Methought I was transported into a country that was filled with
+prodigies and enchantments, governed by the goddess of Falsehood,
+and entitled the Region of False Wit. There was nothing in the
+fields, the woods, and the rivers, that appeared natural. Several
+of the trees blossomed in leaf-gold, some of them produced bone-
+lace, and some of them precious stones. The fountains bubbled in an
+opera tune, and were filled with stags, wild bears, and mermaids,
+that lived among the waters; at the same time that dolphins and
+several kinds of fish played upon the banks, or took their pastime
+in the meadows. The birds had many of them golden beaks, and human
+voices. The flowers perfumed the air with smells of incense,
+ambergris, and pulvillios; and were so interwoven with one another,
+that they grew up in pieces of embroidery. The winds were filled
+with sighs and messages of distant lovers. As I was walking to and
+fro in this enchanted wilderness, I could not forbear breaking out
+into soliloquies upon the several wonders which lay before me, when,
+to my great surprise, I found there were artificial echoes in every
+walk, that, by repetitions of certain words which I spoke, agreed
+with me or contradicted me in everything I said. In the midst of my
+conversation with these invisible companions, I discovered in the
+centre of a very dark grove a monstrous fabric built after the
+Gothic manner, and covered with innumerable devices in that
+barbarous kind of sculpture. I immediately went up to it, and found
+it to be a kind of heathen temple consecrated to the god of Dulness.
+Upon my entrance I saw the deity of the place, dressed in the habit
+of a monk, with a book in one hand and a rattle in the other. Upon
+his right hand was Industry, with a lamp burning before her; and on
+his left, Caprice, with a monkey sitting on her shoulder. Before
+his feet there stood an altar of a very odd make, which, as I
+afterwards found, was shaped in that manner to comply with the
+inscription that surrounded it. Upon the altar there lay several
+offerings of axes, wings, and eggs, cut in paper, and inscribed with
+verses. The temple was filled with votaries, who applied themselves
+to different diversions, as their fancies directed them. In one
+part of it I saw a regiment of anagrams, who were continually in
+motion, turning to the right or to the left, facing about, doubling
+their ranks, shifting their stations, and throwing themselves into
+all the figures and counter-marches of the most changeable and
+perplexed exercise.
+
+Not far from these was the body of acrostics, made up of very
+disproportioned persons. It was disposed into three columns, the
+officers planting themselves in a line on the left hand of each
+column. The officers were all of them at least six feet high, and
+made three rows of very proper men; but the common soldiers, who
+filled up the spaces between the officers, were such dwarfs,
+cripples, and scarecrows, that one could hardly look upon them
+without laughing. There were behind the acrostics two or three
+files of chronograms, which differed only from the former as their
+officers were equipped, like the figure of Time, with an hour-glass
+in one hand, and a scythe in the other, and took their posts
+promiscuously among the private men whom they commanded.
+
+In the body of the temple, and before the very face of the deity,
+methought I saw the phantom of Tryphiodorus, the lipogrammatist,
+engaged in a ball with four-and-twenty persons, who pursued him by
+turns through all the intricacies and labyrinths of a country dance,
+without being able to overtake him.
+
+Observing several to be very busy at the western end of the temple,
+I inquired into what they were doing, and found there was in that
+quarter the great magazine of rebuses. These were several things of
+the most different natures tied up in bundles, and thrown upon one
+another in heaps like fagots. You might behold an anchor, a night-
+rail, and a hobby-horse bound up together. One of the workmen,
+seeing me very much surprised, told me there was an infinite deal of
+wit in several of those bundles, and that he would explain them to
+me if I pleased; I thanked him for his civility, but told him I was
+in very great haste at that time. As I was going out of the temple,
+I observed in one corner of it a cluster of men and women laughing
+very heartily, and diverting themselves at a game of crambo. I
+heard several double rhymes as I passed by them, which raised a
+great deal of mirth.
+
+Not far from these was another set of merry people engaged at a
+diversion, in which the whole jest was to mistake one person for
+another. To give occasion for these ludicrous mistakes, they were
+divided into pairs, every pair being covered from head to foot with
+the same kind of dress, though perhaps there was not the least
+resemblance in their faces. By this means an old man was sometimes
+mistaken for a boy, a woman for a man, and a blackamoor for an
+European, which very often produced great peals of laughter. These
+I guessed to be a party of puns. But being very desirous to get out
+of this world of magic, which had almost turned my brain, I left the
+temple and crossed over the fields that lay about it with all the
+speed I could make. I was not gone far before I heard the sound of
+trumpets and alarms, which seemed to proclaim the march of an enemy:
+and, as I afterwards found, was in reality what I apprehended it.
+There appeared at a great distance a very shining light, and in the
+midst of it a person of a most beautiful aspect; her name was Truth.
+On her right hand there marched a male deity, who bore several
+quivers on his shoulders, and grasped several arrows in his hand;
+his name was Wit. The approach of these two enemies filled all the
+territories of False Wit with an unspeakable consternation, insomuch
+that the goddess of those regions appeared in person upon her
+frontiers, with the several inferior deities and the different
+bodies of forces which I had before seen in the temple, who were now
+drawn up in array, and prepared to give their foes a warm reception.
+As the march of the enemy was very slow, it gave time to the several
+inhabitants who bordered upon the regions of Falsehood to draw their
+forces into a body, with a design to stand upon their guard as
+neuters, and attend the issue of the combat.
+
+I must here inform my reader that the frontiers of the enchanted
+region, which I have before described, were inhabited by the species
+of Mixed Wit, who made a very odd appearance when they were mustered
+together in an army. There were men whose bodies were stuck full of
+darts, and women whose eyes were burning-glasses; men that had
+hearts of fire, and women that had breasts of snow. It would be
+endless to describe several monsters of the like nature that
+composed this great army, which immediately fell asunder, and
+divided itself into two parts, the one half throwing themselves
+behind the banners of Truth, and the others behind those of
+Falsehood.
+
+The goddess of Falsehood was of a gigantic stature, and advanced
+some paces before the front of the army; but as the dazzling light
+which flowed from Truth began to shine upon her, she faded
+insensibly; insomuch that in a little space she looked rather like a
+huge phantom than a real substance. At length, as the goddess of
+Truth approached still nearer to her, she fell away entirely, and
+vanished amidst the brightness of her presence; so that there did
+not remain the least trace or impression of her figure in the place
+where she had been seen.
+
+As at the rising of the sun the constellations grow thin, and the
+stars go out one after another, till the whole hemisphere is
+extinguished; such was the vanishing of the goddess, and not only of
+the goddess herself, but of the whole army that attended her, which
+sympathised with their leader, and shrunk into nothing, in
+proportion as the goddess disappeared. At the same time the whole
+temple sunk, the fish betook themselves to the streams, and the wild
+beasts to the woods, the fountains recovered their murmurs, the
+birds their voices, the trees their leaves, the flowers their
+scents, and the whole face of nature its true and genuine
+appearance. Though I still continued asleep, I fancied myself, as
+it were, awakened out of a dream, when I saw this region of
+prodigies restored to woods and rivers, fields and meadows.
+
+Upon the removal of that wild scene of wonders, which had very much
+disturbed my imagination, I took a full survey of the persons of Wit
+and Truth; for indeed it was impossible to look upon the first
+without seeing the other at the same time. There was behind them a
+strong compact body of figures. The genius of Heroic Poetry
+appeared with a sword in her hand, and a laurel on her head.
+Tragedy was crowned with cypress, and covered with robes dipped in
+blood. Satire had smiles in her look, and a dagger under her
+garment. Rhetoric was known by her thunderbolt, and Comedy by her
+mask. After several other figures, Epigram marched up in the rear,
+who had been posted there at the beginning of the expedition, that
+he might not revolt to the enemy, whom he was suspected to favour in
+his heart. I was very much awed and delighted with the appearance
+of the god of Wit; there was something so amiable, and yet so
+piercing in his looks, as inspired me at once with love and terror.
+As I was gazing on him, to my unspeakable joy, he took a quiver of
+arrows from his shoulder, in order to make me a present of it; but
+as I was reaching out my hand to receive it of him, I knocked it
+against a chair, and by that means awaked.
+
+
+
+FRIENDSHIP.
+
+
+
+Nos duo turba sumus.
+OVID, Met. i. 355.
+
+We two are a multitude.
+
+One would think that the larger the company is, in which we are
+engaged, the greater variety of thoughts and subjects would be
+started in discourse; but instead of this, we find that conversation
+is never so much straitened and confined as in numerous assemblies.
+When a multitude meet together upon any subject of discourse, their
+debates are taken up chiefly with forms and general positions; nay,
+if we come into a more contracted assembly of men and women, the
+talk generally runs upon the weather, fashions, news, and the like
+public topics. In proportion as conversation gets into clubs and
+knots of friends, it descends into particulars, and grows more free
+and communicative: but the most open, instructive, and unreserved
+discourse is that which passes between two persons who are familiar
+and intimate friends. On these occasions, a man gives a loose to
+every passion and every thought that is uppermost, discovers his
+most retired opinions of persons and things, tries the beauty and
+strength of his sentiments, and exposes his whole soul to the
+examination of his friend.
+
+Tully was the first who observed that friendship improves happiness
+and abates misery, by the doubling of our joy and dividing of our
+grief; a thought in which he hath been followed by all the essayists
+upon friendship that have written since his time. Sir Francis Bacon
+has finely described other advantages, or, as he calls them, fruits
+of friendship; and, indeed, there is no subject of morality which
+has been better handled and more exhausted than this. Among the
+several fine things which have been spoken of it, I shall beg leave
+to quote some out of a very ancient author, whose book would be
+regarded by our modern wits as one of the most shining tracts of
+morality that is extant, if it appeared under the name of a
+Confucius, or of any celebrated Grecian philosopher; I mean the
+little apocryphal treatise entitled The Wisdom of the Son of Sirach.
+How finely has he described the art of making friends by an obliging
+and affable behaviour; and laid down that precept, which a late
+excellent author has delivered as his own, That we should have many
+well-wishers, but few friends. "Sweet language will multiply
+friends; and a fair-speaking tongue will increase kind greetings.
+Be in peace with many, nevertheless have but one counsellor of a
+thousand." With what prudence does he caution us in the choice of
+our friends! And with what strokes of nature, I could almost say of
+humour, has he described the behaviour of a treacherous and self-
+interested friend! "If thou wouldest get a friend, prove him first,
+and be not hasty to credit him: for some man is a friend for his
+own occasion, and will not abide in the day of thy trouble. And
+there is a friend who, being turned to enmity and strife, will
+discover thy reproach." Again, "Some friend is a companion at the
+table, and will not continue in the day of thy affliction: but in
+thy prosperity he will be as thyself, and will be bold over thy
+servants. If thou be brought low, he will be against thee, and hide
+himself from thy face." What can be more strong and pointed than
+the following verse?--"Separate thyself from thine enemies, and take
+heed of thy friends." In the next words he particularises one of
+those fruits of friendship which is described at length by the two
+famous authors above-mentioned, and falls into a general eulogium of
+friendship, which is very just as well as very sublime. "A faithful
+friend is a strong defence; and he that hath found such an one hath
+found a treasure. Nothing doth countervail a faithful friend, and
+his excellency is unvaluable. A faithful friend is the medicine of
+life; and they that fear the Lord shall find him. Whose feareth the
+Lord shall direct his friendship aright; for as he is, so shall his
+neighbour, that is his friend, be also." I do not remember to have
+met with any saying that has pleased me more than that of a friend's
+being the medicine of life, to express the efficacy of friendship in
+healing the pains and anguish which naturally cleave to our
+existence in this world; and am wonderfully pleased with the turn in
+the last sentence, that a virtuous man shall as a blessing meet with
+a friend who is as virtuous as himself. There is another saying in
+the same author, which would have been very much admired in a
+heathen writer: "Forsake not an old friend, for the new is not
+comparable to him: a new friend is as new wine; when it is old thou
+shalt drink it with pleasure." With what strength of allusion and
+force of thought has he described the breaches and violations of
+friendship!--"Whoso casteth a stone at the birds, frayeth them away;
+and he that upbraideth his friend, breaketh friendship. Though thou
+drawest a sword at a friend, yet despair not, for there may be a
+returning to favour. If thou hast opened thy mouth against thy
+friend, fear not, for there may be a reconciliation: except for
+upbraiding, or pride, or disclosing of secrets, or a treacherous
+wound; for, for these things every friend will depart." We may
+observe in this, and several other precepts in this author, those
+little familiar instances and illustrations which are so much
+admired in the moral writings of Horace and Epictetus. There are
+very beautiful instances of this nature in the following passages,
+which are likewise written upon the same subject: "Whose
+discovereth secrets, loseth his credit, and shall never find a
+friend to his mind. Love thy friend, and be faithful unto him; but
+if thou bewrayeth his secrets, follow no more after him: for as a
+man hath destroyed his enemy, so hast thou lost the love of thy
+friend; as one that letteth a bird go out of his hand, so hast thou
+let thy friend go, and shall not get him again: follow after him no
+more, for he is too far off; he is as a roe escaped out of the
+snare. As for a wound it may be bound up, and after reviling there
+may be reconciliation; but he that bewrayeth secrets, is without
+hope."
+
+Among the several qualifications of a good friend, this wise man has
+very justly singled out constancy and faithfulness as the principal:
+to these, others have added virtue, knowledge, discretion, equality
+in age and fortune, and, as Cicero calls it, Morum comitas, "a
+pleasantness of temper." If I were to give my opinion upon such an
+exhausted subject, I should join to these other qualifications a
+certain equability or evenness of behaviour. A man often contracts
+a friendship with one whom perhaps he does not find out till after a
+year's conversation; when on a sudden some latent ill-humour breaks
+out upon him, which he never discovered or suspected at his first
+entering into an intimacy with him. There are several persons who
+in some certain periods of their lives are inexpressibly agreeable,
+and in others as odious and detestable. Martial has given us a very
+pretty picture of one of this species, in the following epigram:
+
+
+Difficilis, facilis, jucundus, acerbus es idem,
+Nec tecum possum vivere, nec sine te.
+Ep. xii. 47.
+
+In all thy humours, whether grave or mellow,
+Thou'rt such a touchy, testy, pleasant fellow;
+Hast so much wit, and mirth, and spleen about thee,
+There is no living with thee, nor without thee.
+
+
+It is very unlucky for a man to be entangled in a friendship with
+one who, by these changes and vicissitudes of humour, is sometimes
+amiable and sometimes odious: and as most men are at some times in
+admirable frame and disposition of mind, it should be one of the
+greatest tasks of wisdom to keep ourselves well when we are so, and
+never to go out of that which is the agreeable part of our
+character.
+
+
+
+CHEVY-CHASE.
+
+
+
+Interdum vulgus rectum videt.
+HOR., Ep. ii. 1, 63.
+
+Sometimes the vulgar see and judge aright. When I travelled I took
+a particular delight in hearing the songs and fables that are come
+from father to son, and are most in vogue among the common people of
+the countries through which I passed; for it is impossible that
+anything should be universally tasted and approved by a multitude,
+though they are only the rabble of a nation, which hath not in it
+some peculiar aptness to please and gratify the mind of man. Human
+nature is the same in all reasonable creatures; and whatever falls
+in with it will meet with admirers amongst readers of all qualities
+and conditions. Moliere, as we are told by Monsieur Boileau, used
+to read all his comedies to an old woman who was his housekeeper as
+she sat with him at her work by the chimney-corner, and could
+foretell the success of his play in the theatre from the reception
+it met at his fireside; for he tells us the audience always followed
+the old woman, and never failed to laugh in the same place.
+
+I know nothing which more shows the essential and inherent
+perfection of simplicity of thought, above that which I call the
+Gothic manner in writing, than this, that the first pleases all
+kinds of palates, and the latter only such as have formed to
+themselves a wrong artificial taste upon little fanciful authors and
+writers of epigram. Homer, Virgil, or Milton, so far as the
+language of their poems is understood, will please a reader of plain
+common sense, who would neither relish nor comprehend an epigram of
+Martial, or a poem of Cowley; so, on the contrary, an ordinary song
+or ballad that is the delight of the common people cannot fail to
+please all such readers as are not unqualified for the entertainment
+by their affectation of ignorance; and the reason is plain, because
+the same paintings of nature which recommend it to the most ordinary
+reader will appear beautiful to the most refined.
+
+The old song of "Chevy-Chase" is the favourite ballad of the common
+people of England, and Ben Jonson used to say he had rather have
+been the author of it than of all his works. Sir Philip Sidney, in
+his discourse of Poetry, speaks of it in the following words: "I
+never heard the old song of Percy and Douglas that I found not my
+heart more moved than with a trumpet; and yet it is sung by some
+blind crowder with no rougher voice than rude style, which being so
+evil apparelled in the dust and cobweb of that uncivil age, what
+would it work trimmed in the gorgeous eloquence of Pindar?" For my
+own part, I am so professed an admirer of this antiquated song, that
+I shall give my reader a critique upon it without any further
+apology for so doing.
+
+The greatest modern critics have laid it down as a rule that an
+heroic poem should be founded upon some important precept of
+morality adapted to the constitution of the country in which the
+poet writes. Homer and Virgil have formed their plans in this view.
+As Greece was a collection of many governments, who suffered very
+much among themselves, and gave the Persian emperor, who was their
+common enemy, many advantages over them by their mutual jealousies
+and animosities, Homer, in order to establish among them an union
+which was so necessary for their safety, grounds his poem upon the
+discords of the several Grecian princes who were engaged in a
+confederacy against an Asiatic prince, and the several advantages
+which the enemy gained by such discords. At the time the poem we
+are now treating of was written, the dissensions of the barons, who
+were then so many petty princes, ran very high, whether they
+quarrelled among themselves or with their neighbours, and produced
+unspeakable calamities to the country. The poet, to deter men from
+such unnatural contentions, describes a bloody battle and dreadful
+scene of death, occasioned by the mutual feuds which reigned in the
+families of an English and Scotch nobleman. That he designed this
+for the instruction of his poem we may learn from his four last
+lines, in which, after the example of the modern tragedians, he
+draws from it a precept for the benefit of his readers:
+
+
+God save the king, and bless the land
+In plenty, joy, and peace;
+And grant henceforth that foul debate
+'Twixt noblemen may cease.
+
+
+The next point observed by the greatest heroic poets hath been to
+celebrate persons and actions which do honour to their country:
+thus Virgil's hero was the founder of Rome; Homer's a prince of
+Greece; and for this reason Valerius Flaccus and Statius, who were
+both Romans, might be justly derided for having chosen the
+expedition of the Golden Fleece and the Wars of Thebes for the
+subjects of their epic writings.
+
+The poet before us has not only found out a hero in his own country,
+but raises the reputation of it by several beautiful incidents. The
+English are the first who take the field and the last who quit it.
+The English bring only fifteen hundred to the battle, the Scotch two
+thousand. The English keep the field with fifty-three, the Scotch
+retire with fifty-five; all the rest on each side being slain in
+battle. But the most remarkable circumstance of this kind is the
+different manner in which the Scotch and English kings receive the
+news of this fight, and of the great men's deaths who commanded in
+it:
+
+
+This news was brought to Edinburgh,
+Where Scotland's king did reign,
+That brave Earl Douglas suddenly
+Was with an arrow slain.
+
+"O heavy news!" King James did say,
+"Scotland can witness be,
+I have not any captain more
+Of such account as he."
+
+Like tidings to King Henry came,
+Within as short a space,
+That Percy of Northumberland
+Was slain in Chevy-Chase.
+
+"Now God be with him," said our king,
+"Sith 'twill no better be,
+I trust I have within my realm
+Five hundred as good as he.
+
+"Yet shall not Scot nor Scotland say
+But I will vengeance take,
+And be revenged on them all
+For brave Lord Percy's sake."
+
+This vow full well the king performed
+After on Humble-down,
+In one day fifty knights were slain,
+With lords of great renown.
+
+And of the rest of small account
+Did many thousands die, &c.
+
+
+At the same time that our poet shows a laudable partiality to his
+countrymen, he represents the Scots after a manner not unbecoming so
+bold and brave a people:
+
+
+Earl Douglas on a milk-white steed,
+Most like a baron bold,
+Rode foremost of the company,
+Whose armour shone like gold.
+
+
+His sentiments and actions are every way suitable to a hero. "One
+of us two," says he, "must die: I am an earl as well as yourself,
+so that you can have no pretence for refusing the combat; however,"
+says he, "it is pity, and indeed would be a sin, that so many
+innocent men should perish for our sakes: rather let you and I end
+our quarrel in single fight:"
+
+
+"Ere thus I will out-braved be,
+One of us two shall die;
+I know thee well, an earl thou art,
+Lord Percy, so am I.
+
+"But trust me, Percy, pity it were
+And great offence to kill
+Any of these our harmless men,
+For they have done no ill.
+
+"Let thou and I the battle try,
+And set our men aside."
+"Accurst be he," Lord Percy said,
+"By whom this is deny'd."
+
+
+When these brave men had distinguished themselves in the battle and
+in single combat with each other, in the midst of a generous parley,
+full of heroic sentiments, the Scotch earl falls, and with his dying
+words encourages his men to revenge his death, representing to them,
+as the most bitter circumstance of it, that his rival saw him fall:
+
+
+With that there came an arrow keen
+Out of an English bow,
+Which struck Earl Douglas to the heart
+A deep and deadly blow.
+
+Who never spoke more words than these,
+"Fight on, my merry men all,
+For why, my life is at an end,
+Lord Percy sees my fall."
+
+
+Merry men, in the language of those times, is no more than a
+cheerful word for companions and fellow-soldiers. A passage in the
+eleventh book of Virgil's "AEneid" is very much to be admired, where
+Camilla, in her last agonies, instead of weeping over the wound she
+had received, as one might have expected from a warrior of her sex,
+considers only, like the hero of whom we are now speaking, how the
+battle should be continued after her death:
+
+
+Tum sic exspirans, &c.
+VIRG., AEn. xi. 820.
+
+A gath'ring mist o'erclouds her cheerful eyes;
+And from her cheeks the rosy colour flies,
+Then turns to her, whom of her female train
+She trusted most, and thus she speaks with pain:
+"Acca, 'tis past! he swims before my sight,
+Inexorable Death, and claims his right.
+Bear my last words to Turnus; fly with speed
+And bid him timely to my charge succeed;
+Repel the Trojans, and the town relieve:
+Farewell."
+DRYDEN.
+
+
+Turnus did not die in so heroic a manner, though our poet seems to
+have had his eye upon Turnus's speech in the last verse:
+
+
+Lord Percy sees my fall.
+
+- Vicisti, et victum tendere palmas
+Ausonii videre.
+VIRG., AEn. xii. 936.
+
+The Latin chiefs have seen me beg my life.
+DRYDEN.
+
+
+Earl Percy's lamentation over his enemy is generous, beautiful, and
+passionate. I must only caution the reader not to let the
+simplicity of the style, which one may well pardon in so old a poet,
+prejudice him against the greatness of the thought:
+
+
+Then leaving life, Earl Percy took
+The dead man by the hand,
+And said, "Earl Douglas, for thy life
+Would I had lost my land.
+
+"O Christ! my very heart doth bleed
+With sorrow for thy sake;
+For sure a more renowned knight
+Mischance did never take."
+
+
+That beautiful line, "Taking the dead man by the hand," will put the
+reader in mind of AEneas's behaviour towards Lausus, whom he himself
+had slain as he came to the rescue of his aged father:
+
+
+At vero ut vultum vidit morientis et ora,
+Ora modis Anchisiades pallentia miris;
+Ingemuit, miserans graviter, dextramqne tetendit.
+VIRG., AEn. x. 821.
+
+The pious prince beheld young Lausus dead;
+He grieved, he wept, then grasped his hand and said,
+"Poor hapless youth! what praises can be paid
+To worth so great?"
+DRYDEN.
+
+
+I shall take another opportunity to consider the other parts of this
+old song.
+
+
+
+NEXT ESSAY
+
+
+
+- Pendent opera interrupta.
+VIRG., AEn. iv. 88.
+
+
+The works unfinished and neglected lie.
+
+In my last Monday's paper I gave some general instances of those
+beautiful strokes which please the reader in the old song of "Chevy-
+Chase;" I shall here, according to my promise, be more particular,
+and show that the sentiments in that ballad are extremely natural
+and poetical, and full of the majestic simplicity which we admire in
+the greatest of the ancient poets: for which reason I shall quote
+several passages of it, in which the thought is altogether the same
+with what we meet in several passages of the "AEneid;" not that I
+would infer from thence that the poet, whoever he was, proposed to
+himself any imitation of those passages, but that he was directed to
+them in general by the same kind of poetical genius, and by the same
+copyings after nature.
+
+Had this old song been filled with epigrammatical turns and points
+of wit, it might perhaps have pleased the wrong taste of some
+readers; but it would never have become the delight of the common
+people, nor have warmed the heart of Sir Philip Sidney like the
+sound of a trumpet; it is only nature that can have this effect, and
+please those tastes which are the most unprejudiced, or the most
+refined. I must, however, beg leave to dissent from so great an
+authority as that of Sir Philip Sidney, in the judgment which he has
+passed as to the rude style and evil apparel of this antiquated
+song; for there are several parts in it where not only the thought
+but the language is majestic, and the numbers sonorous; at least the
+apparel is much more gorgeous than many of the poets made use of in
+Queen Elizabeth's time, as the reader will see in several of the
+following quotations.
+
+What can be greater than either the thought or the expression in
+that stanza,
+
+
+To drive the deer with hound and horn
+Earl Percy took his way;
+The child may rue that is unborn
+The hunting of that day!
+
+
+This way of considering the misfortunes which this battle would
+bring upon posterity, not only on those who were born immediately
+after the battle, and lost their fathers in it, but on those also
+who perished in future battles which took their rise from this
+quarrel of the two earls, is wonderfully beautiful and conformable
+to the way of thinking among the ancient poets.
+
+
+Audiet pugnas vitio parentum.
+Rara juventus.
+HOR., Od. i. 2, 23.
+
+Posterity, thinn'd by their fathers' crimes,
+Shall read, with grief, the story of their times.
+
+
+What can be more sounding and poetical, or resemble more the
+majestic simplicity of the ancients, than the following stanzas?--
+
+
+The stout Earl of Northumberland
+A vow to God did make,
+His pleasure in the Scottish woods
+Three summer's days to take.
+
+With fifteen hundred bowmen bold,
+All chosen men of might,
+Who knew full well, in time of need,
+To aim their shafts aright.
+
+The hounds ran swiftly through the woods
+The nimble deer to take,
+And with their cries the hills and dales
+An echo shrill did make.
+
+- Vocat ingenti clamore Cithaeron,
+Taygetique canes, domitrixque Epidaurus equorum:
+Et vox assensu memorum ingeminata remugit.
+VIRG., Georg. iii. 43.
+
+
+Cithaeron loudly calls me to my way:
+Thy hounds, Taygetus, open, and pursue their prey:
+High Epidaurus urges on my speed,
+Famed for his hills, and for his horses' breed:
+From hills and dales the cheerful cries rebound:
+For Echo hunts along, and propagates the sound.
+DRYDEN.
+
+
+Lo, yonder doth Earl Douglas come,
+His men in armour bright;
+Full twenty hundred Scottish spears,
+All marching in our sight.
+
+All men of pleasant Tividale,
+Fast by the river Tweed, &c.
+
+
+The country of the Scotch warrior, described in these two last
+verses, has a fine romantic situation, and affords a couple of
+smooth words for verse. If the reader compares the foregoing six
+lines of the song with the following Latin verses, he will see how
+much they are written in the spirit of Virgil:
+
+
+Adversi campo apparent: hastasque reductis
+Protendunt longe dextris, et spicula vibrant:-
+Quique altum Praeneste viri, quique arva Gabinae
+Junonis, gelidumque Anienem, et roscida rivis
+Hernica saxa colunt:- qui rosea rura Velini;
+Qui Tetricae horrentes rupes, montemq ue Severum,
+Casperiamque colunt, porulosque et flumen Himellae:
+Qui Tyberim Fabarimque bibunt.
+AEn. xi. 605, vii. 682, 712.
+
+Advancing in a line they couch their spears--
+- Praeneste sends a chosen band,
+With those who plough Saturnia's Gabine land:
+Besides the succours which cold Anien yields:
+The rocks of Hernicus--besides a band
+That followed from Velinum's dewy land -
+And mountaineers that from Severus came:
+And from the craggy cliffs of Tetrica;
+And those where yellow Tiber takes his way,
+And where Himella's wanton waters play:
+Casperia sends her arms, with those that lie
+By Fabaris, and fruitful Foruli.
+DRYDEN.
+
+
+But to proceed:
+
+
+Earl Douglas on a milk-white steed,
+Most like a baron bold,
+Rode foremost of the company,
+Whose armour shone like gold.
+
+Turnus, ut antevolans tardum praecesserat agmen, &c.
+Vidisti, quo Turnus equo, quibus ibat in armis
+Aurcus--AEn. ix. 47, 269.
+
+Our English archers bent their bows,
+Their hearts were good and true;
+At the first flight of arrows sent,
+Full threescore Scots they slew.
+
+They closed full fast on ev'ry side,
+No slackness there was found;
+And many a gallant gentleman
+Lay gasping on the ground.
+
+With that there came an arrow keen
+Out of an English bow,
+Which struck Earl Douglas to the heart,
+A deep and deadly blow.
+
+
+AEneas was wounded after the same manner by an unknown hand in the
+midst of a parley.
+
+
+Has inter voces, media inter talia verba,
+Ecce viro stridens alis allapsa sagitta est,
+Incertum qua pulsa manu--AEn. xii. 318.
+
+Thus, while he spake, unmindful of defence,
+A winged arrow struck the pious prince;
+But whether from a human hand it came,
+Or hostile god, is left unknown by fame.
+DRYDEN.
+
+
+But of all the descriptive parts of this song, there are none more
+beautiful than the four following stanzas, which have a great force
+and spirit in them, and are filled with very natural circumstances.
+The thought in the third stanza was never touched by any other poet,
+and is such a one as would have shone in Homer or in Virgil:
+
+
+So thus did both these nobles die,
+Whose courage none could stain;
+An English archer then perceived
+The noble Earl was slain.
+
+He had a bow bent in his hand,
+Made of a trusty tree,
+An arrow of a cloth-yard long
+Unto the head drew he.
+
+Against Sir Hugh Montgomery
+So right his shaft he set,
+The gray-goose wing that was thereon
+In his heart-blood was wet.
+
+This fight did last from break of day
+Till setting of the sun;
+For when they rung the ev'ning bell
+The battle scarce was done.
+
+
+One may observe, likewise, that in the catalogue of the slain, the
+author has followed the example of the greatest ancient poets, not
+only in giving a long list of the dead, but by diversifying it with
+little characters of particular persons.
+
+
+And with Earl Douglas there was slain
+Sir Hugh Montgomery,
+Sir Charles Carrel, that from the field
+One foot would never fly.
+
+Sir Charles Murrel of Ratcliff too,
+His sister's son was he;
+Sir David Lamb so well esteem'd,
+Yet saved could not be.
+
+
+The familiar sound in these names destroys the majesty of the
+description; for this reason I do not mention this part of the poem
+but to show the natural cast of thought which appears in it, as the
+two last verses look almost like a translation of Virgil.
+
+
+- Cadit et Ripheus justissimus unus
+Qui fuit in Teucris et servantissimus aequi.
+Diis aliter visum.
+AEn. ii. 426.
+
+Then Ripheus fell in the unequal fight,
+Just of his word, observant of the right:
+Heav'n thought not so.
+DRYDEN.
+
+
+In the catalogue of the English who fell, Witherington's behaviour
+is in the same manner particularised very artfully, as the reader is
+prepared for it by that account which is given of him in the
+beginning of the battle; though I am satisfied your little buffoon
+readers, who have seen that passage ridiculed in "Hudibras," will
+not be able to take the beauty of it: for which reason I dare not
+so much as quote it.
+
+
+Then stept a gallant 'squire forth,
+Witherington was his name,
+Who said, "I would not have it told
+To Henry our king for shame,
+
+"That e'er my captain fought on foot,
+And I stood looking on."
+
+
+We meet with the same heroic sentiment in Virgil:
+
+
+Non pudet, O Rutuli, cunctis pro talibus unam
+Objectare animam? numerone an viribus aequi
+Non sumus?
+AEn. xii. 229
+
+For shame, Rutilians, can you hear the sight
+Of one exposed for all, in single fight?
+Can we before the face of heav'n confess
+Our courage colder, or our numbers less?
+DRYDEN.
+
+
+What can be more natural, or more moving, than the circumstances in
+which he describes the behaviour of those women who had lost their
+husbands on this fatal day?
+
+
+Next day did many widows come
+Their husbands to bewail;
+They wash'd their wounds in brinish tears,
+But all would not prevail.
+
+Their bodies bathed in purple blood,
+They bore with them away;
+They kiss'd them dead a thousand times,
+When they were clad in clay.
+
+
+Thus we see how the thoughts of this poem, which naturally arise
+from the subject, are always simple, and sometimes exquisitely
+noble; that the language is often very sounding, and that the whole
+is written with a true poetical spirit.
+
+If this song had been written in the Gothic manner which is the
+delight of all our little wits, whether writers or readers, it would
+not have hit the taste of so many ages, and have pleased the readers
+of all ranks and conditions. I shall only beg pardon for such a
+profusion of Latin quotations; which I should not have made use of,
+but that I feared my own judgment would have looked too singular on
+such a subject, had not I supported it by the practice and authority
+of Virgil.
+
+
+
+A DREAM OF THE PAINTERS.
+
+
+
+- Animum pictura pascit inani.
+VIRG., AEn. i. 464.
+
+And with the shadowy picture feeds his mind.
+
+When the weather hinders me from taking my diversions without-doors,
+I frequently make a little party, with two or three select friends,
+to visit anything curious that may be seen under cover. My
+principal entertainments of this nature are pictures, insomuch that
+when I have found the weather set in to be very bad, I have taken a
+whole day's journey to see a gallery that is furnished by the hands
+of great masters. By this means, when the heavens are filled with
+clouds, when the earth swims in rain, and all nature wears a
+lowering countenance, I withdraw myself from these uncomfortable
+scenes, into the visionary worlds of art; where I meet with shining
+landscapes, gilded triumphs, beautiful faces, and all those other
+objects that fill the mind with gay ideas, and disperse that
+gloominess which is apt to hang upon it in those dark disconsolate
+seasons.
+
+I was some weeks ago in a course of these diversions, which had
+taken such an entire possession of my imagination that they formed
+in it a short morning's dream, which I shall communicate to my
+reader, rather as the first sketch and outlines of a vision, than as
+a finished piece.
+
+I dreamt that I was admitted into a long, spacious gallery, which
+had one side covered with pieces of all the famous painters who are
+now living, and the other with the works of the greatest masters
+that are dead.
+
+On the side of the living, I saw several persons busy in drawing,
+colouring, and designing. On the side of the dead painters, I could
+not discover more than one person at work, who was exceeding slow in
+his motions, and wonderfully nice in his touches.
+
+I was resolved to examine the several artists that stood before me,
+and accordingly applied myself to the side of the living. The first
+I observed at work in this part of the gallery was Vanity, with his
+hair tied behind him in a riband, and dressed like a Frenchman. All
+the faces he drew were very remarkable for their smiles, and a
+certain smirking air which he bestowed indifferently on every age
+and degree of either sex. The toujours gai appeared even in his
+judges, bishops, and Privy Councillors. In a word, all his men were
+petits maitres, and all his women coquettes. The drapery of his
+figures was extremely well suited to his faces, and was made up of
+all the glaring colours that could be mixed together; every part of
+the dress was in a flutter, and endeavoured to distinguish itself
+above the rest.
+
+On the left hand of Vanity stood a laborious workman, who I found
+was his humble admirer, and copied after him. He was dressed like a
+German, and had a very hard name that sounded something like
+Stupidity.
+
+The third artist that I looked over was Fantasque, dressed like a
+Venetian scaramouch. He had an excellent hand at chimera, and dealt
+very much in distortions and grimaces. He would sometimes affright
+himself with the phantoms that flowed from his pencil. In short,
+the most elaborate of his pieces was at best but a terrifying dream:
+and one could say nothing more of his finest figures than that they
+were agreeable monsters.
+
+The fourth person I examined was very remarkable for his hasty hand,
+which left his pictures so unfinished that the beauty in the
+picture, which was designed to continue as a monument of it to
+posterity, faded sooner than in the person after whom it was drawn.
+He made so much haste to despatch his business that he neither gave
+himself time to clean his pencils nor mix his colours. The name of
+this expeditious workman was Avarice.
+
+Not far from this artist I saw another of a quite different nature,
+who was dressed in the habit of a Dutchman, and known by the name of
+Industry. His figures were wonderfully laboured. If he drew the
+portraiture of a man, he did not omit a single hair in his face; if
+the figure of a ship, there was not a rope among the tackle that
+escaped him. He had likewise hung a great part of the wall with
+night-pieces, that seemed to show themselves by the candles which
+were lighted up in several parts of them; and were so inflamed by
+the sunshine which accidentally fell upon them, that at first sight
+I could scarce forbear crying out "Fire!"
+
+The five foregoing artists were the most considerable on this side
+the gallery; there were indeed several others whom I had not time to
+look into. One of them, however, I could not forbear observing, who
+was very busy in retouching the finest pieces, though he produced no
+originals of his own. His pencil aggravated every feature that was
+before overcharged, loaded every defect, and poisoned every colour
+it touched. Though this workman did so much mischief on the side of
+the living, he never turned his eye towards that of the dead. His
+name was Envy.
+
+Having taken a cursory view of one side of the gallery, I turned
+myself to that which was filled by the works of those great masters
+that were dead; when immediately I fancied myself standing before a
+multitude of spectators, and thousands of eyes looking upon me at
+once: for all before me appeared so like men and women, that I
+almost forgot they were pictures. Raphael's pictures stood in one
+row, Titian's in another, Guido Rheni's in a third. One part of the
+wall was peopled by Hannabal Carrache, another by Correggio, and
+another by Rubens. To be short, there was not a great master among
+the dead who had not contributed to the embellishment of this side
+of the gallery. The persons that owed their being to these several
+masters appeared all of them to be real and alive, and differed
+among one another only in the variety of their shapes, complexions,
+and clothes; so that they looked like different nations of the same
+species.
+
+Observing an old man, who was the same person I before mentioned, as
+the only artist that was at work on this side of the gallery,
+creeping up and down from one picture to another, and retouching all
+the fine pieces that stood before me, I could not but be very
+attentive to all his motions. I found his pencil was so very light
+that it worked imperceptibly, and after a thousand touches scarce
+produced any visible effect in the picture on which he was employed.
+However, as he busied himself incessantly, and repeated touch after
+touch without rest or intermission, he wore off insensibly every
+little disagreeable gloss that hung upon a figure. He also added
+such a beautiful brown to the shades, and mellowness to the colours,
+that he made every picture appear more perfect than when it came
+fresh from the master's pencil. I could not forbear looking upon
+the face of this ancient workman, and immediately by the long lock
+of hair upon his forehead, discovered him to be Time.
+
+Whether it were because the thread of my dream was at an end I
+cannot tell, but, upon my taking a survey of this imaginary old man,
+my sleep left me.
+
+
+
+SPARE TIME.
+
+
+
+- Spatio brevi
+Spem longam reseces: dum loquimur, fugerit invida
+AEtas: carpe diem, quam minimum credula postero.
+HOR., Od. i. 11, 6.
+
+Thy lengthen'd hope with prudence bound,
+Proportion'd to the flying hour:
+While thus we talk in careless ease,
+Our envious minutes wing their flight;
+Then swift the fleeting pleasure seize,
+Nor trust to-morrow's doubtful light.
+FRANCIS.
+
+We all of us complain of the shortness of time, saith Seneca, and
+yet have much more than we know what to do with. Our lives, says
+he, are spent either in doing nothing at all, or in doing nothing to
+the purpose, or in doing nothing that we ought to do. We are always
+complaining our days are few, and acting as though there would be no
+end of them. That noble philosopher described our inconsistency
+with ourselves in this particular, by all those various turns of
+expression and thoughts which are peculiar to his writings.
+
+I often consider mankind as wholly inconsistent with itself in a
+point that bears some affinity to the former. Though we seem
+grieved at the shortness of life in general, we are wishing every
+period of it at an end. The minor longs to be of age, then to be a
+man of business, then to make up an estate, then to arrive at
+honours, then to retire. Thus, although the whole of life is
+allowed by every one to be short, the several divisions of it appear
+long and tedious. We are for lengthening our span in general, but
+would fain contract the parts of which it is composed. The usurer
+would be very well satisfied to have all the time annihilated that
+lies between the present moment and next quarter-day. The
+politician would be contented to lose three years in his life, could
+he place things in the posture which he fancies they will stand in
+after such a revolution of time. The lover would be glad to strike
+out of his existence all the moments that are to pass away before
+the happy meeting. Thus, as fast as our time runs, we should be
+very glad, in most part of our lives, that it ran much faster than
+it does. Several hours of the day hang upon our hands, nay, we wish
+away whole years; and travel through time as through a country
+filled with many wild and empty wastes, which we would fain hurry
+over, that we may arrive at those several little settlements or
+imaginary points of rest which are dispersed up and down in it.
+
+If we divide the life of most men into twenty parts, we shall find
+that at least nineteen of them are mere gaps and chasms, which are
+neither filled with pleasure nor business. I do not, however,
+include in this calculation the life of those men who are in a
+perpetual hurry of affairs, but of those only who are not always
+engaged in scenes of action; and I hope I shall not do an
+unacceptable piece of service to these persons, if I point out to
+them certain methods for the filling up their empty spaces of life.
+The methods I shall propose to them are as follow.
+
+The first is the exercise of virtue, in the most general acceptation
+of the word. That particular scheme which comprehends the social
+virtues may give employment to the most industrious temper, and find
+a man in business more than the most active station of life. To
+advise the ignorant, relieve the needy, comfort the afflicted, are
+duties that fall in our way almost every day of our lives. A man
+has frequent opportunities of mitigating the fierceness of a party;
+of doing justice to the character of a deserving man; of softening
+the envious, quieting the angry, and rectifying the prejudiced;
+which are all of them employments suited to a reasonable nature, and
+bring great satisfaction to the person who can busy himself in them
+with discretion.
+
+There is another kind of virtue that may find employment for those
+retired hours in which we are altogether left to ourselves, and
+destitute of company and conversation; I mean that intercourse and
+communication which every reasonable creature ought to maintain with
+the great Author of his being. The man who lives under an habitual
+sense of the Divine presence, keeps up a perpetual cheerfulness of
+temper, and enjoys every moment the satisfaction of thinking himself
+in company with his dearest and best of friends. The time never
+lies heavy upon him: it is impossible for him to be alone. His
+thoughts and passions are the most busied at such hours when those
+of other men are the most inactive. He no sooner steps out of the
+world but his heart burns with devotion, swells with hope, and
+triumphs in the consciousness of that Presence which everywhere
+surrounds him; or, on the contrary, pours out its fears, its
+sorrows, its apprehensions, to the great Supporter of its existence.
+
+I have here only considered the necessity of a man's being virtuous,
+that he may have something to do; but if we consider further that
+the exercise of virtue is not only an amusement for the time it
+lasts, but that its influence extends to those parts of our
+existence which lie beyond the grave, and that our whole eternity is
+to take its colour from those hours which we here employ in virtue
+or in vice, the argument redoubles upon us for putting in practice
+this method of passing away our time.
+
+When a man has but a little stock to improve, and has opportunities
+of turning it all to good account, what shall we think of him if he
+suffers nineteen parts of it to lie dead, and perhaps employs even
+the twentieth to his ruin or disadvantage? But, because the mind
+cannot be always in its fervours, nor strained up to a pitch of
+virtue, it is necessary to find out proper employments for it in its
+relaxations.
+
+The next method, therefore, that I would propose to fill up our
+time, should be useful and innocent diversions. I must confess I
+think it is below reasonable creatures to be altogether conversant
+in such diversions as are merely innocent, and have nothing else to
+recommend them but that there is no hurt in them. Whether any kind
+of gaming has even thus much to say for itself, I shall not
+determine; but I think it is very wonderful to see persons of the
+best sense passing away a dozen hours together in shuffling and
+dividing a pack of cards, with no other conversation but what is
+made up of a few game phrases, and no other ideas but those of black
+or red spots ranged together in different figures. Would not a man
+laugh to hear any one of this species complaining that life is
+short?
+
+The stage might be made a perpetual source of the most noble and
+useful entertainments, were it under proper regulations.
+
+But the mind never unbends itself so agreeably as in the
+conversation of a well-chosen friend. There is indeed no blessing
+of life that is any way comparable to the enjoyment of a discreet
+and virtuous friend. It eases and unloads the mind, clears and
+improves the understanding, engenders thoughts and knowledge,
+animates virtue and good resolutions, soothes and allays the
+passions, and finds employment for most of the vacant hours of life.
+
+Next to such an intimacy with a particular person, one would
+endeavour after a more general conversation with such as are able to
+entertain and improve those with whom they converse, which are
+qualifications that seldom go asunder.
+
+There are many other useful amusements of life which one would
+endeavour to multiply, that one might on all occasions have recourse
+to something rather than suffer the mind to lie idle, or run adrift
+with any passion that chances to rise in it.
+
+A man that has a taste of music, painting, or architecture, is like
+one that has another sense, when compared with such as have no
+relish of those arts. The florist, the planter, the gardener, the
+husbandman, when they are only as accomplishments to the man of
+fortune, are great reliefs to a country life, and many ways useful
+to those who are possessed of them.
+
+But of all the diversions of life, there is none so proper to fill
+up its empty spaces as the reading of useful and entertaining
+authors. But this I shall only touch upon, because it in some
+measure interferes with the third method, which I shall propose in
+another paper, for the employment of our dead, inactive hours, and
+which I shall only mention in general to be the pursuit of
+knowledge.
+
+
+
+NEXT ESSAY
+
+
+
+- Hoc est
+Vivere bis, vita posse priore frui.
+MART., Ep. x. 23.
+
+The present joys of life we doubly taste,
+By looking back with pleasure to the past.
+
+The last method which I proposed in my Saturday's paper, for filing
+up those empty spaces of life which are so tedious and burthensome
+to idle people, is the employing ourselves in the pursuit of
+knowledge. I remember Mr. Boyle, speaking of a certain mineral,
+tells us that a man may consume his whole life in the study of it
+without arriving at the knowledge of all its qualities. The truth
+of it is, there is not a single science, or any branch of it, that
+might not furnish a man with business for life, though it were much
+longer than it is.
+
+I shall not here engage on those beaten subjects of the usefulness
+of knowledge, nor of the pleasure and perfection it gives the mind,
+nor on the methods of attaining it, nor recommend any particular
+branch of it; all which have been the topics of many other writers;
+but shall indulge myself in a speculation that is more uncommon, and
+may therefore, perhaps, be more entertaining.
+
+I have before shown how the unemployed parts of life appear long and
+tedious, and shall here endeavour to show how those parts of life
+which are exercised in study, reading, and the pursuits of
+knowledge, are long, but not tedious, and by that means discover a
+method of lengthening our lives, and at the same time of turning all
+the parts of them to our advantage.
+
+Mr. Locke observes, "That we get the idea of time or duration, by
+reflecting on that train of ideas which succeed one another in our
+minds: that, for this reason, when we sleep soundly without
+dreaming, we have no perception of time, or the length of it whilst
+we sleep; and that the moment wherein we leave off to think, till
+the moment we begin to think again, seems to have no distance." To
+which the author adds, "and so I doubt not but it would be to a
+waking man, if it were possible for him to keep only one idea in his
+mind, without variation and the succession of others; and we see
+that one who fixes his thoughts very intently on one thing, so as to
+take but little notice of the succession of ideas that pass in his
+mind whilst he is taken up with that earnest contemplation, lets
+slip out of his account a good part of that duration, and thinks
+that time shorter than it is."
+
+We might carry this thought further, and consider a man as on one
+side, shortening his time by thinking on nothing, or but a few
+things; so, on the other, as lengthening it, by employing his
+thoughts on many subjects, or by entertaining a quick and constant
+succession of ideas. Accordingly, Monsieur Malebranche, in his
+"Inquiry after Truth," which was published several years before Mr.
+Locke's Essay on "Human Understanding," tells us, "that it is
+possible some creatures may think half an hour as long as we do a
+thousand years; or look upon that space of duration which we call a
+minute, as an hour, a week, a month, or a whole age."
+
+This notion of Monsieur Malebranche is capable of some little
+explanation from what I have quoted out of Mr. Locke; for if our
+notion of time is produced by our reflecting on the succession of
+ideas in our mind, and this succession may be infinitely accelerated
+or retarded, it will follow that different beings may have different
+notions of the same parts of duration, according as their ideas,
+which we suppose are equally distinct in each of them, follow one
+another in a greater or less degree of rapidity.
+
+There is a famous passage in the Alcoran, which looks as if Mahomet
+had been possessed of the notion we are now speaking of. It is
+there said that the Angel Gabriel took Mahomet out of his bed one
+morning to give him a sight of all things in the seven heavens, in
+paradise, and in hell, which the prophet took a distinct view of;
+and, after having held ninety thousand conferences with God, was
+brought back again to his bed. All this, says the Alcoran, was
+transacted in so small a space of time, that Mahomet at his return
+found his bed still warm, and took up an earthen pitcher, which was
+thrown down at the very instant that the Angel Gabriel carried him
+away, before the water was all spilt.
+
+There is a very pretty story in the Turkish Tales, which relates to
+this passage of that famous impostor, and bears some affinity to the
+subject we are now upon. A sultan of Egypt, who was an infidel,
+used to laugh at this circumstance in Mahomet's life, as what was
+altogether impossible and absurd: but conversing one day with a
+great doctor in the law, who had the gift of working miracles, the
+doctor told him he would quickly convince him of the truth of this
+passage in the history of Mahomet, if he would consent to do what he
+should desire of him. Upon this the sultan was directed to place
+himself by a huge tub of water, which he did accordingly; and as he
+stood by the tub amidst a circle of his great men, the holy man bade
+him plunge his head into the water and draw it up again. The king
+accordingly thrust his head into the water, and at the same time
+found himself at the foot of a mountain on the sea-shore. The king
+immediately began to rage against his doctor for this piece of
+treachery and witchcraft; but at length, knowing it was in vain to
+be angry, he set himself to think on proper methods for getting a
+livelihood in this strange country. Accordingly he applied himself
+to some people whom he saw at work in a neighbouring wood: these
+people conducted him to a town that stood at a little distance from
+the wood, where, after some adventures, he married a woman of great
+beauty and fortune. He lived with this woman so long that he had by
+her seven sons and seven daughters. He was afterwards reduced to
+great want, and forced to think of plying in the streets as a porter
+for his livelihood. One day as he was walking alone by the sea-
+side, being seized with many melancholy reflections upon his former
+and his present state of life, which had raised a fit of devotion in
+him, he threw off his clothes with a design to wash himself,
+according to the custom of the Mahometans, before he said his
+prayers.
+
+After his first plunge into the sea, he no sooner raised his head
+above the water but he found himself standing by the side of the
+tub, with the great men of his court about him, and the holy man at
+his side. He immediately upbraided his teacher for having sent him
+on such a course of adventures, and betrayed him into so long a
+state of misery and servitude; but was wonderfully surprised when he
+heard that the state he talked of was only a dream and delusion;
+that he had not stirred from the place where he then stood; and that
+he had only dipped his head into the water, and immediately taken it
+out again.
+
+The Mahometan doctor took this occasion of instructing the sultan
+that nothing was impossible with God; and that He, with whom a
+thousand years are but as one day, can, if He pleases, make a single
+day--nay, a single moment--appear to any of His creatures as a
+thousand years.
+
+I shall leave my reader to compare these Eastern fables with the
+notions of those two great philosophers whom I have quoted in this
+paper; and shall only, by way of application, desire him to consider
+how we may extend life beyond its natural dimensions, by applying
+ourselves diligently to the pursuit of knowledge.
+
+The hours of a wise man are lengthened by his ideas, as those of a
+fool are by his passions. The time of the one is long, because he
+does not know what to do with it; so is that of the other, because
+he distinguishes every moment of it with useful or amusing thoughts;
+or, in other words, because the one is always wishing it away, and
+the other always enjoying it.
+
+How different is the view of past life, in the man who is grown old
+in knowledge and wisdom, from that of him who is grown old in
+ignorance and folly! The latter is like the owner of a barren
+country, that fills his eye with the prospect of naked hills and
+plains, which produce nothing either profitable or ornamental; the
+other beholds a beautiful and spacious landscape divided into
+delightful gardens, green meadows, fruitful fields, and can scarce
+cast his eye on a single spot of his possessions that is not covered
+with some beautiful plant or flower.
+
+
+
+CENSURE.
+
+
+
+Romulus, et Liber pater, et cum Castore Pollux,
+Post ingentia facta, deorum in templa recepti;
+Dum terras hominumque colunt genus, aspera bella
+Componunt, agros assignant, oppida condunt;
+Ploravere suis non respondere favorem
+Speratum meritis.
+HOR., Epist. ii. 1, 5.
+
+MITATED.
+
+Edward and Henry, now the boast of fame,
+And virtuous Alfred, a more sacred name,
+After a life of generous toils endured,
+The Gaul subdued, or property secured,
+Ambition humbled, mighty cities storm'd,
+Or laws establish'd, and the world reform'd;
+Closed their long glories with a sigh to find
+Th' unwilling gratitude of base mankind.
+POPE.
+
+"Censure," says a late ingenious author, "is the tax a man pays to
+the public for being eminent." It is a folly for an eminent man to
+think of escaping it, and a weakness to be affected with it. All
+the illustrious persons of antiquity, and indeed of every age in the
+world, have passed through this fiery persecution. There is no
+defence against reproach but obscurity; it is a kind of concomitant
+to greatness, as satires and invectives were an essential part of a
+Roman triumph.
+
+If men of eminence are exposed to censure on one hand, they are as
+much liable to flattery on the other. If they receive reproaches
+which are not due to them, they likewise receive praises which they
+do not deserve. In a word, the man in a high post is never regarded
+with an indifferent eye, but always considered as a friend or an
+enemy. For this reason persons in great stations have seldom their
+true characters drawn till several years after their deaths. Their
+personal friendships and enmities must cease, and the parties they
+were engaged in be at an end, before their faults or their virtues
+can have justice done them. When writers have the least opportunity
+of knowing the truth, they are in the best disposition to tell it.
+
+It is therefore the privilege of posterity to adjust the characters
+of illustrious persons, and to set matters right between those
+antagonists who by their rivalry for greatness divided a whole age
+into factions. We can now allow Caesar to be a great man, without
+derogating from Pompey; and celebrate the virtues of Cato, without
+detracting from those of Caesar. Every one that has been long dead
+has a due proportion of praise allotted him, in which, whilst he
+lived, his friends were too profuse, and his enemies too sparing.
+
+According to Sir Isaac Newton's calculations, the last comet that
+made its appearance, in 1680, imbibed so much heat by its approaches
+to the sun, that it would have been two thousand times hotter than
+red-hot iron, had it been a globe of that metal; and that supposing
+it as big as the earth, and at the same distance from the sun, it
+would be fifty thousand years in cooling, before it recovered its
+natural temper. In the like manner, if an Englishman considers the
+great ferment into which our political world is thrown at present,
+and how intensely it is heated in all its parts, he cannot suppose
+that it will cool again in less than three hundred years. In such a
+tract of time it is possible that the heats of the present age may
+be extinguished, and our several classes of great men represented
+under their proper characters. Some eminent historian may then
+probably arise that will not write recentibus odiis, as Tacitus
+expresses it, with the passions and prejudices of a contemporary
+author, but make an impartial distribution of fame among the great
+men of the present age.
+
+I cannot forbear entertaining myself very often with the idea of
+such an imaginary historian describing the reign of Anne the First,
+and introducing it with a preface to his reader, that he is now
+entering upon the most shining part of the English story. The great
+rivals in fame will be then distinguished according to their
+respective merits, and shine in their proper points of light. Such
+an one, says the historian, though variously represented by the
+writers of his own age, appears to have been a man of more than
+ordinary abilities, great application, and uncommon integrity: nor
+was such an one, though of an opposite party and interest, inferior
+to him in any of these respects. The several antagonists who now
+endeavour to depreciate one another, and are celebrated or traduced
+by different parties, will then have the same body of admirers, and
+appear illustrious in the opinion of the whole British nation. The
+deserving man, who can now recommend himself to the esteem of but
+half his countrymen, will then receive the approbations and
+applauses of a whole age.
+
+Among the several persons that flourish in this glorious reign,
+there is no question but such a future historian, as the person of
+whom I am speaking, will make mention of the men of genius and
+learning who have now any figure in the British nation. For my own
+part, I often flatter myself with the honourable mention which will
+then be made of me; and have drawn up a paragraph in my own
+imagination, that I fancy will not be altogether unlike what will be
+found in some page or other of this imaginary historian.
+
+It was under this reign, says he, that the Spectator published those
+little diurnal essays which are still extant. We know very little
+of the name or person of this author, except only that he was a man
+of a very short face, extremely addicted to silence, and so great a
+lover of knowledge, that he made a voyage to Grand Cairo for no
+other reason but to take the measure of a pyramid. His chief friend
+was one Sir Roger De Coverley, a whimsical country knight, and a
+Templar, whose name he has not transmitted to us. He lived as a
+lodger at the house of a widow-woman, and was a great humorist in
+all parts of his life. This is all we can affirm with any certainty
+of his person and character. As for his speculations,
+notwithstanding the several obsolete words and obscure phrases of
+the age in which he lived, we still understand enough of them to see
+the diversions and characters of the English nation in his time:
+not but that we are to make allowance for the mirth and humour of
+the author, who has doubtless strained many representations of
+things beyond the truth. For if we interpret his words in their
+literal meaning, we must suppose that women of the first quality
+used to pass away whole mornings at a puppet-show; that they
+attested their principles by their patches; that an audience would
+sit out an evening to hear a dramatical performance written in a
+language which they did not understand; that chairs and flower-pots
+were introduced as actors upon the British stage; that a promiscuous
+assembly of men and women were allowed to meet at midnight in masks
+within the verge of the Court; with many improbabilities of the like
+nature. We must therefore, in these and the like cases, suppose
+that these remote hints and allusions aimed at some certain follies
+which were then in vogue, and which at present we have not any
+notion of. We may guess by several passages in the speculations,
+that there were writers who endeavoured to detract from the works of
+this author; but as nothing of this nature is come down to us, we
+cannot guess at any objections that could be made to his paper. If
+we consider his style with that indulgence which we must show to old
+English writers, or if we look into the variety of his subjects,
+with those several critical dissertations, moral reflections, -
+
+* * *
+
+The following part of the paragraph is so much to my advantage, and
+beyond anything I can pretend to, that I hope my reader will excuse
+me for not inserting it.
+
+
+
+THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE.
+
+
+
+Est brevitate opus, ut currat sententia,
+HOR., Sat. i. 10, 9.
+
+Let brevity despatch the rapid thought.
+
+I have somewhere read of an eminent person who used in his private
+offices of devotion to give thanks to Heaven that he was born a
+Frenchman: for my own part I look upon it as a peculiar blessing
+that I was born an Englishman. Among many other reasons, I think
+myself very happy in my country, as the language of it is
+wonderfully adapted to a man who is sparing of his words, and an
+enemy to loquacity.
+
+As I have frequently reflected on my good fortune in this
+particular, I shall communicate to the public my speculations upon
+the English tongue, not doubting but they will be acceptable to all
+my curious readers.
+
+The English delight in silence more than any other European nation,
+if the remarks which are made on us by foreigners are true. Our
+discourse is not kept up in conversation, but falls into more pauses
+and intervals than in our neighbouring countries; as it is observed
+that the matter of our writings is thrown much closer together, and
+lies in a narrower compass, than is usual in the works of foreign
+authors; for, to favour our natural taciturnity, when we are obliged
+to utter our thoughts we do it in the shortest way we are able, and
+give as quick a birth to our conceptions as possible.
+
+This humour shows itself in several remarks that we may make upon
+the English language. As, first of all, by its abounding in
+monosyllables, which gives us an opportunity of delivering our
+thoughts in few sounds. This indeed takes off from the elegance of
+our tongue, but at the same time expresses our ideas in the readiest
+manner, and consequently answers the first design of speech better
+than the multitude of syllables which make the words of other
+languages more tuneable and sonorous. The sounds of our English
+words are commonly like those of string music, short and transient,
+which rise and perish upon a single touch; those of other languages
+are like the notes of wind instruments, sweet and swelling, and
+lengthened out into variety of modulation.
+
+In the next place we may observe that, where the words are not
+monosyllables, we often make them so, as much as lies in our power,
+by our rapidity of pronunciation; as it generally happens in most of
+our long words which are derived from the Latin, where we contract
+the length of the syllables, that gives them a grave and solemn air
+in their own language, to make them more proper for despatch, and
+more conformable to the genius of our tongue. This we may find in a
+multitude of words, as "liberty," "conspiracy," "theatre," "orator,"
+&c.
+
+The same natural aversion to loquacity has of late years made a very
+considerable alteration in our language, by closing in one syllable
+the termination of our preterperfect tense, as in the words
+"drown'd," "walk'd," "arriv'd," for " drowned," "walked," "arrived,"
+which has very much disfigured the tongue, and turned a tenth part
+of our smoothest words into so many clusters of consonants. This is
+the more remarkable because the want of vowels in our language has
+been the general complaint of our politest authors, who nevertheless
+are the men that have made these retrenchments, and consequently
+very much increased our former scarcity.
+
+This reflection on the words that end in "ed" I have heard in
+conversation from one of the greatest geniuses this age has
+produced. I think we may add to the foregoing observation, the
+change which has happened in our language by the abbreviation of
+several words that are terminated in "eth," by substituting an "s"
+in the room of the last syllable, as in "drowns," "walks,"
+"arrives," and innumerable other words, which in the pronunciation
+of our forefathers were "drowneth," "walketh," "arriveth." This has
+wonderfully multiplied a letter which was before too frequent in the
+English tongue, and added to that hissing in our language which is
+taken so much notice of by foreigners, but at the same time humours
+our taciturnity, and eases us of many superfluous syllables.
+
+I might here observe that the same single letter on many occasions
+does the office of a whole word, and represents the "his" and "her"
+of our forefathers. There is no doubt but the ear of a foreigner,
+which is the best judge in this case, would very much disapprove of
+such innovations, which indeed we do ourselves in some measure, by
+retaining the old termination in writing, and in all the solemn
+offices of our religion.
+
+As, in the instances I have given, we have epitomised many of our
+particular words to the detriment of our tongue, so on other
+occasions we have drawn two words into one, which has likewise very
+much untuned our language, and clogged it with consonants, as
+"mayn't," "can't," "shan't," "won't," and the like, for "may not,"
+"can not," "shall not," "will not," &c.
+
+It is perhaps this humour of speaking no more than we needs must
+which has so miserably curtailed some of our words, that in familiar
+writings and conversations they often lose all but their first
+syllables, as in "mob.," "rep.," "pos.," "incog.," and the like; and
+as all ridiculous words make their first entry into a language by
+familiar phrases, I dare not answer for these that they will not in
+time be looked upon as a part of our tongue. We see some of our
+poets have been so indiscreet as to imitate Hudibras's doggrel
+expressions in their serious compositions, by throwing out the signs
+of our substantives which are essential to the English language.
+Nay, this humour of shortening our language had once run so far,
+that some of our celebrated authors, among whom we may reckon Sir
+Roger L'Estrange in particular, began to prune their words of all
+superfluous letters, as they termed them, in order to adjust the
+spelling to the pronunciation; which would have confounded all our
+etymologies, and have quite destroyed our tongue.
+
+We may here likewise observe that our proper names, when
+familiarised in English, generally dwindle to monosyllables, whereas
+in other modern languages they receive a softer turn on this
+occasion, by the addition of a new syllable.--Nick, in Italian, is
+Nicolini; Jack, in French, Janot; and so of the rest.
+
+There is another particular in our language which is a great
+instance of our frugality in words, and that is the suppressing of
+several particles which must be produced in other tongues to make a
+sentence intelligible. This often perplexes the best writers, when
+they find the relatives "whom," "which," or "they," at their mercy,
+whether they may have admission or not; and will never be decided
+till we have something like an academy, that by the best
+authorities, and rules drawn from the analogy of languages, shall
+settle all controversies between grammar and idiom.
+
+I have only considered our language as it shows the genius and
+natural temper of the English, which is modest, thoughtful, and
+sincere, and which, perhaps, may recommend the people, though it has
+spoiled the tongue. We might, perhaps, carry the same thought into
+other languages, and deduce a great part of what is peculiar to them
+from the genius of the people who speak them. It is certain the
+light talkative humour of the French has not a little infected their
+tongue, which might be shown by many instances; as the genius of the
+Italians, which is so much addicted to music and ceremony, has
+moulded all their words and phrases to those particular uses. The
+stateliness and gravity of the Spaniards shows itself to perfection
+in the solemnity of their language; and the blunt, honest humour of
+the Germans sounds better in the roughness of the High-Dutch than it
+would in a politer tongue.
+
+
+
+THE VISION OF MIRZA.
+
+
+
+- Omnem, quae nunc obducta tuenti
+Mortales hebetat visus tibi, et humida circum
+Caligat, nubem eripiam.
+VIRG., AEn. ii. 604.
+
+The cloud, which, intercepting the clear light,
+Hangs o'er thy eyes, and blunts thy mortal sight,
+I will remove.
+
+When I was at Grand Cairo, I picked up several Oriental manuscripts,
+which I have still by me. Among others I met with one entitled "The
+Visions of Mirza," which I have read over with great pleasure. I
+intend to give it to the public when I have no other entertainment
+for them; and shall begin with the first vision, which I have
+translated word for word as follows:
+
+"On the fifth day of the moon, which, according to the custom of my
+forefathers, I always keep holy, after having washed myself, and
+offered up my morning devotions, I ascended the high hills of
+Bagdad, in order to pass the rest of the day in meditation and
+prayer. As I was here airing myself on the tops of the mountains, I
+fell into a profound contemplation on the vanity of human life; and
+passing from one thought to another, 'Surely,' said I, 'man is but a
+shadow, and life a dream.' Whilst I was thus musing, I cast my eyes
+towards the summit of a rock that was not far from me, where I
+discovered one in the habit of a shepherd, with a musical instrument
+in his hand. As I looked upon him he applied it to his lips, and
+began to play upon it. The sound of it was exceeding sweet, and
+wrought into a variety of tunes that were inexpressibly melodious,
+and altogether different from anything I had ever heard. They put
+me in mind of those heavenly airs that are played to the departed
+souls of good men upon their first arrival in Paradise, to wear out
+the impressions of their last agonies, and qualify them for the
+pleasures of that happy place. My heart melted away in secret
+raptures.
+
+"I had been often told that the rock before me was the haunt of a
+genius, and that several had been entertained with music who had
+passed by it, but never heard that the musician had before made
+himself visible. When he had raised my thoughts by those
+transporting airs which he played, to taste the pleasures of his
+conversation, as I looked upon him like one astonished, he beckoned
+to me, and, by the waving of his hand, directed me to approach the
+place where he sat. I drew near with that reverence which is due to
+a superior nature; and, as my heart was entirely subdued by the
+captivating strains I had heard, I fell down at his feet and wept.
+The genius smiled upon me with a look of compassion and affability
+that familiarised him to my imagination, and at once dispelled all
+the fears and apprehensions with which I approached him. He lifted
+me from the ground, and, taking me by the hand, 'Mirza,' said he, 'I
+have heard thee in thy soliloquies; follow me.'
+
+"He then led me to the highest pinnacle of the rock, and placing me
+on the top of it, 'Cast thy eyes eastward,' said he, 'and tell me
+what thou seest.' 'I see,' said I, 'a huge valley, and a prodigious
+tide of water rolling through it.' 'The valley that thou seest,'
+said he, 'is the Vale of Misery, and the tide of water that thou
+seest is part of the great tide of Eternity.' 'What is the reason,'
+said I, 'that the tide I see rises out of a thick mist at one end,
+and again loses itself in a thick mist at the other?' 'What thou
+seest,' said he, 'is that portion of Eternity which is called Time,
+measured out by the sun, and reaching from the beginning of the
+world to its consummation. Examine now,' said he, 'this sea that is
+bounded with darkness at both ends, and tell me what thou
+discoverest in it.' 'I see a bridge,' said I, 'standing in the
+midst of the tide.' 'The bridge thou seest,' said he, 'is Human
+Life; consider it attentively.' Upon a more leisurely survey of it,
+I found that it consisted of threescore and ten entire arches, with
+several broken arches, which, added to those that were entire, made
+up the number about a hundred. As I was counting the arches, the
+genius told me that this bridge consisted at first of a thousand
+arches; but that a great flood swept away the rest, and left the
+bridge in the ruinous condition I now beheld it. 'But tell me
+further,' said he, 'what thou discoverest on it.' 'I see multitudes
+of people passing over it,' said I, 'and a black cloud hanging on
+each end of it.' As I looked more attentively, I saw several of the
+passengers dropping through the bridge into the great tide that
+flowed underneath it; and, upon further examination, perceived there
+were innumerable trap-doors that lay concealed in the bridge, which
+the passengers no sooner trod upon but they fell through them into
+the tide, and immediately disappeared. These hidden pit-falls were
+set very thick at the entrance of the bridge, so that throngs of
+people no sooner broke through the cloud but many of them fell into
+them. They grew thinner towards the middle, but multiplied and lay
+closer together towards the end of the arches that were entire.
+
+"There were indeed some persons, but their number was very small,
+that continued a kind of hobbling march on the broken arches, but
+fell through one after another, being quite tired and spent with so
+long a walk.
+
+"I passed some time in the contemplation of this wonderful
+structure, and the great variety of objects which it presented. My
+heart was filled with a deep melancholy to see several dropping
+unexpectedly in the midst of mirth and jollity, and catching at
+everything that stood by them to save themselves. Some were looking
+up towards the heavens in a thoughtful posture, and in the midst of
+a speculation stumbled and fell out of sight. Multitudes were very
+busy in the pursuit of bubbles that glittered in their eyes and
+danced before them; but often when they thought themselves within
+the reach of them, their footing failed and down they sunk. In this
+confusion of objects, I observed some with scimitars in their hands,
+who ran to and fro from the bridge, thrusting several persons on
+trapdoors which did not seem to lie in their way, and which they
+might have escaped had they not been thus forced upon them.
+
+"The genius, seeing me indulge myself on this melancholy prospect,
+told me I had dwelt long enough upon it. 'Take thine eyes off the
+bridge,' said he, 'and tell me if thou yet seest anything thou dost
+not comprehend.' Upon looking up, 'What mean,' said I, 'those great
+flights of birds that are perpetually hovering about the bridge, and
+settling upon it from time to time? I see vultures, harpies,
+ravens, cormorants, and among many other feathered creatures,
+several little winged boys, that perch in great numbers upon the
+middle arches.' 'These,' said the genius, 'are Envy, Avarice,
+Superstition, Despair, Love, with the like cares and passions that
+infest human life.'
+
+"I here fetched a deep sigh. 'Alas,' said I, 'man was made in vain!
+how is he given away to misery and mortality! tortured in life, and
+swallowed up in death!' The genius, being moved with compassion
+towards me, bade me quit so uncomfortable a prospect. 'Look no
+more,' said he, 'on man in the first stage of his existence, in his
+setting out for Eternity; but cast thine eye on that thick mist into
+which the tide bears the several generations of mortals that fall
+into it.' I directed my sight as I was ordered, and, whether or no
+the good genius strengthened it with any supernatural force, or
+dissipated part of the mist that was before too thick for the eye to
+penetrate, I saw the valley opening at the further end, and
+spreading forth into an immense ocean, that had a huge rock of
+adamant running through the midst of it, and dividing it into two
+equal parts. The clouds still rested on one half of it, insomuch
+that I could discover nothing in it; but the other appeared to me a
+vast ocean planted with innumerable islands, that were covered with
+fruits and flowers, and interwoven with a thousand little shining
+seas that ran among them. I could see persons dressed in glorious
+habits, with garlands upon their heads, passing among the trees,
+lying down by the sides of fountains, or resting on beds of flowers;
+and could hear a confused harmony of singing birds, falling waters,
+human voices, and musical instruments. Gladness grew in me upon the
+discovery of so delightful a scene. I wished for the wings of an
+eagle, that I might fly away to those happy seats; but the genius
+told me there was no passage to them, except through the gates of
+death that I saw opening every moment upon the bridge. 'The
+islands,' said he, 'that lie so fresh and green before thee, amid
+with which the whole face of the ocean appears spotted as far as
+thou canst see, are more in number than the sands on the sea-shore:
+there are myriads of islands behind those which thou here
+discoverest, reaching further than thine eye, or even thine
+imagination can extend itself. These are the mansions of good men
+after death, who, according to the degree and kinds of virtue in
+which they excelled, are distributed among those several islands,
+which abound with pleasures of different kinds and degrees, suitable
+to the relishes and perfections of those who are settled in them:
+every island is a paradise accommodated to its respective
+inhabitants. Are not these, O Mirza, habitations worth contending
+for? Does life appear miserable that gives thee opportunities of
+earning such a reward? Is death to be feared that will convey thee
+to so happy an existence? Think not man was made in vain, who has
+such an Eternity reserved for him.' I gazed with inexpressible
+pleasure on these happy islands. At length, said I, 'Show me now, I
+beseech thee, the secrets that lie hid under those dark clouds which
+cover the ocean on the other side of the rock of adamant.' The
+genius making me no answer, I turned about to address myself to him
+a second time, but I found that he had left me; I then turned again
+to the vision which I had been so long contemplating: but instead
+of the rolling tide, the arched bridge, and the happy islands, I saw
+nothing but the long hollow valley of Bagdad, with oxen, sheep, and
+camels grazing upon the sides of it."
+
+
+
+GENIUS.
+
+
+
+- Cui mens divinior, atque os
+Magna sonaturum des nominis hujus honorem.
+HOR., Sat. i. 4, 43.
+
+On him confer the poet's sacred name,
+Whose lofty voice declares the heavenly flame.
+
+There is no character more frequently given to a writer than that of
+being a genius. I have heard many a little sonneteer called a fine
+genius. There is not a heroic scribbler in the nation that has not
+his admirers who think him a great genius; and as for your
+smatterers in tragedy, there is scarce a man among them who is not
+cried up by one or other for a prodigious genius.
+
+My design in this paper is to consider what is properly a great
+genius, and to throw some thoughts together on so uncommon a
+subject.
+
+Among great geniuses those few draw the admiration of all the world
+upon them, and stand up as the prodigies of mankind, who, by the
+mere strength of natural parts, and without any assistance of art or
+learning, have produced works that were the delight of their own
+times and the wonder of posterity. There appears something nobly
+wild and extravagant in these great natural geniuses, that is
+infinitely more beautiful than all turn and polishing of what the
+French call a bel esprit, by which they would express a genius
+refined by conversation, reflection, and the reading of the most
+polite authors. The greatest genius which runs through the arts and
+sciences takes a kind of tincture from them and falls unavoidably
+into imitation.
+
+Many of these great natural geniuses, that were never disciplined
+and broken by rules of art, are to be found among the ancients, and
+in particular among those of the more Eastern parts of the world.
+Homer has innumerable flights that Virgil was not able to reach, and
+in the Old Testament we find several passages more elevated and
+sublime than any in Homer. At the same time that we allow a greater
+and more daring genius to the ancients, we must own that the
+greatest of them very much failed in, or, if you will, that they
+were much above the nicety and correctness of the moderns. In their
+similitudes and allusions, provided there was a likeness, they did
+not much trouble themselves about the decency of the comparison:
+thus Solomon resembles the nose of his beloved to the tower of
+Lebanon which looketh towards Damascus, as the coming of a thief in
+the night is a similitude of the same kind in the New Testament. It
+would be endless to make collections of this nature. Homer
+illustrates one of his heroes encompassed with the enemy, by an ass
+in a field of corn that has his sides belaboured by all the boys of
+the village without stirring a foot for it; and another of them
+tossing to and fro in his bed, and burning with resentment, to a
+piece of flesh broiled on the coals. This particular failure in the
+ancients opens a large field of raillery to the little wits, who can
+laugh at an indecency, but not relish the sublime in these sorts of
+writings. The present Emperor of Persia, conformable to this
+Eastern way of thinking, amidst a great many pompous titles,
+denominates himself "the sun of glory" and "the nutmeg of delight."
+In short, to cut off all cavilling against the ancients, and
+particularly those of the warmer climates, who had most heat and
+life in their imaginations, we are to consider that the rule of
+observing what the French call the bienseance in an allusion has
+been found out of later years, and in the colder regions of the
+world, where we could make some amends for our want of force and
+spirit by a scrupulous nicety and exactness in our compositions.
+Our countryman Shakespeare was a remarkable instance of this first
+kind of great geniuses.
+
+I cannot quit this head without observing that Pindar was a great
+genius of the first class, who was hurried on by a natural fire and
+impetuosity to vast conceptions of things and noble sallies of
+imagination. At the same time can anything be more ridiculous than
+for men of a sober and moderate fancy to imitate this poet's way of
+writing in those monstrous compositions which go among us under the
+name of Pindarics? When I see people copying works which, as Horace
+has represented them, are singular in their kind, and inimitable;
+when I see men following irregularities by rule, and by the little
+tricks of art straining after the most unbounded flights of nature,
+I cannot but apply to them that passage in Terence:
+
+
+- Incerta haec si tu postules
+Ratione certa facere, nihilo plus agas
+Quam si des operam, ut cum ratione insanias.
+Eun., Act I., Sc. 1, I. 16.
+
+
+You may as well pretend to be mad and in your senses at the same
+time, as to think of reducing these uncertain things to any
+certainty by reason.
+
+In short, a modern Pindaric writer compared with Pindar is like a
+sister among the Camisars compared with Virgil's Sibyl; there is the
+distortion, grimace, and outward figure, but nothing of that divine
+impulse which raises the mind above itself, and makes the sounds
+more than human.
+
+There is another kind of great geniuses which I shall place in a
+second class, not as I think them inferior to the first, but only
+for distinction's sake, as they are of a different kind. This
+second class of great geniuses are those that have formed themselves
+by rules, and submitted the greatness of their natural talents to
+the corrections and restraints of art. Such among the Greeks were
+Plato and Aristotle; among the Romans, Virgil and Tully; among the
+English, Milton and Sir Francis Bacon.
+
+The genius in both these classes of authors may be equally great,
+but shows itself after a different manner. In the first it is like
+a rich soil in a happy climate, that produces a whole wilderness of
+noble plants rising in a thousand beautiful landscapes without any
+certain order or regularity; in the other it is the same rich soil,
+under the same happy climate, that has been laid out in walks and
+parterres, and cut into shape and beauty by the skill of the
+gardener.
+
+The great danger in these latter kind of geniuses is lest they cramp
+their own abilities too much by imitation, and form themselves
+altogether upon models, without giving the full play to their own
+natural parts. An imitation of the best authors is not to compare
+with a good original; and I believe we may observe that very few
+writers make an extraordinary figure in the world who have not
+something in their way of thinking or expressing themselves, that is
+peculiar to them, and entirely their own.
+
+It is odd to consider what great geniuses are sometimes thrown away
+upon trifles.
+
+"I once saw a shepherd," says a famous Italian author, "who used to
+divert himself in his solitudes with tossing up eggs and catching
+them again without breaking them; in which he had arrived to so
+great a degree of perfection that he would keep up four at a time
+for several minutes together playing in the air, and falling into
+his hand by turns. I think," says the author, "I never saw a
+greater severity than in this man's face, for by his wonderful
+perseverance and application he had contracted the seriousness and
+gravity of a privy councillor, and I could not but reflect with
+myself that the same assiduity and attention, had they been rightly
+applied, 'might' have made a greater mathematician than Archimedes."
+
+
+
+THEODOSIUS AND CONSTANTIA.
+
+
+
+Illa; Quis et me, inquit, miseram et te perdidit, Orpheu? -
+Jamque vale: feror ingenti circumdata nocte,
+Invalidasque tibi tendens, heu! non tua, palmas.
+VIRG., Georg., iv. 494.
+
+Then thus the bride: "What fury seiz'd on thee,
+'Unhappy man! to lose thyself and me? -
+And now farewell! involv'd in shades of night,
+For ever I am ravish'd from thy sight:
+In vain I reach my feeble hands, to join
+In sweet embraces--ah! no longer thine!"
+DRYDEN.
+
+Constantia was a woman of extraordinary wit and beauty, but very
+unhappy in a father who, having arrived at great riches by his own
+industry, took delight in nothing but his money. Theodosius was the
+younger son of a decayed family, of great parts and learning,
+improved by a genteel and virtuous education. When he was in the
+twentieth year of his age he became acquainted with Constantia, who
+had not then passed her fifteenth. As he lived but a few miles
+distant from her father's house, he had frequent opportunities of
+seeing her; and, by the advantages of a good person and a pleasing
+conversation, made such an impression in her heart as it was
+impossible for time to efface. He was himself no less smitten with
+Constantia. A long acquaintance made them still discover new
+beauties in each other, and by degrees raised in them that mutual
+passion which had an influence on their following lives. It
+unfortunately happened that, in the midst of this intercourse of
+love and friendship between Theodosius and Constantia, there broke
+out an irreparable quarrel between their parents; the one valuing
+himself too much upon his birth, and the other upon his possessions.
+The father of Constantia was so incensed at the father of
+Theodosius, that he contracted an unreasonable aversion towards his
+son, insomuch that he forbade him his house, and charged his
+daughter upon her duty never to see him more. In the meantime, to
+break off all communication between the two lovers, who he knew
+entertained secret hopes of some favourable opportunity that should
+bring them together, he found out a young gentleman of a good
+fortune and an agreeable person, whom he pitched upon as a husband
+for his daughter. He soon concerted this affair so well, that he
+told Constantia it was his design to marry her to such a gentleman,
+and that her wedding should be celebrated on such a day.
+Constantia, who was overawed with the authority of her father, and
+unable to object anything against so advantageous a match, received
+the proposal with a profound silence, which her father commended in
+her, as the most decent manner of a virgin's giving her consent to
+an overture of that kind. The noise of this intended marriage soon
+reached Theodosius, who, after a long tumult of passions which
+naturally rise in a lover's heart on such an occasion, wrote the
+following letter to Constantia:-
+
+
+"The thought of my Constantia, which for some years has been my only
+happiness, is now become a greater torment to me than I am able to
+bear. Must I then live to see you another's? The streams, the
+fields, and meadows, where we have so often talked together, grow
+painful to me; life itself is become a burden. May you long be
+happy in the world, but forget that there was ever such a man in it
+as
+
+"THEODOSIUS."
+
+
+This letter was conveyed to Constantia that very evening, who
+fainted at the reading of it; and the next morning she was much more
+alarmed by two or three messengers that came to her father's house,
+one after another, to inquire if they had heard anything of
+Theodosius, who, it seems, had left his chamber about midnight, and
+could nowhere be found. The deep melancholy which had hung upon his
+mind some time before made them apprehend the worst that could
+befall him. Constantia, who knew that nothing but the report of her
+marriage could have driven him to such extremities, was not to he
+comforted. She now accused herself for having so tamely given an
+ear to the proposal of a husband, and looked upon the new lover as
+the murderer of Theodosius. In short, she resolved to suffer the
+utmost effects of her father's displeasure rather than comply with a
+marriage which appeared to her so full of guilt and horror. The
+father, seeing himself entirely rid of Theodosius, and likely to
+keep a considerable portion in his family, was not very much
+concerned at the obstinate refusal of his daughter, and did not find
+it very difficult to excuse himself upon that account to his
+intended son-in-law, who had all along regarded this alliance rather
+as a marriage of convenience than of love. Constantia had now no
+relief but in her devotions and exercises of religion, to which her
+affections had so entirely subjected her mind, that after some years
+had abated the violence of her sorrows, and settled her thoughts in
+a kind of tranquillity, she resolved to pass the remainder of her
+days in a convent. Her father was not displeased with a resolution
+which would save money in his family, and readily complied with his
+daughter's intentions. Accordingly, in the twenty-fifth year of her
+age, while her beauty was yet in all its height and bloom, he
+carried her to a neighbouring city, in order to look out a
+sisterhood of nuns among whom to place his daughter. There was in
+this place a father of a convent who was very much renowned for his
+piety and exemplary life: and as it is usual in the Romish Church
+for those who are under any great affliction, or trouble of mind, to
+apply themselves to the most eminent confessors for pardon and
+consolation, our beautiful votary took the opportunity of confessing
+herself to this celebrated father.
+
+We must now return to Theodosius, who, the very morning that the
+above-mentioned inquiries had been made after him, arrived at a
+religious house in the city where now Constantia resided; and
+desiring that secrecy and concealment of the fathers of the convent,
+which is very usual upon any extraordinary occasion, he made himself
+one of the order, with a private vow never to inquire after
+Constantia; whom he looked upon as given away to his rival upon the
+day on which, according to common fame, their marriage was to have
+been solemnised. Having in his youth made a good progress in
+learning, that he might dedicate himself more entirely to religion,
+he entered into holy orders, and in a few years became renowned for
+his sanctity of life, and those pious sentiments which he inspired
+into all who conversed with him. It was this holy man to whom
+Constantia had determined to apply herself in confession, though
+neither she nor any other, besides the prior of the convent, knew
+anything of his name or family. The gay, the amiable Theodosius had
+now taken upon him the name of Father Francis, and was so far
+concealed in a long beard, a shaven head, and a religious habit,
+that it was impossible to discover the man of the world in the
+venerable conventual.
+
+As he was one morning shut up in his confessional, Constantia
+kneeling by him opened the state of her soul to him; and after
+having given him the history of a life full of innocence, she burst
+out into tears, and entered upon that part of her story in which he
+himself had so great a share. "My behaviour," says she, "has, I
+fear, been the death of a man who had no other fault but that of
+loving me too much. Heaven only knows how dear he was to me whilst
+he lived, and how bitter the remembrance of him has been to me since
+his death." She here paused, and lifted up her eyes that streamed
+with tears towards the father, who was so moved with the sense of
+her sorrows that he could only command his voice, which was broken
+with sighs and sobbings, so far as to bid her proceed. She followed
+his directions, and in a flood of tears poured out her heart before
+him. The father could not forbear weeping aloud, insomuch that, in
+the agonies of his grief, the seat shook under him. Constantia, who
+thought the good man was thus moved by his compassion towards her,
+and by the horror of her guilt, proceeded with the utmost contrition
+to acquaint him with that vow of virginity in which she was going to
+engage herself, as the proper atonement for her sins, and the only
+sacrifice she could make to the memory of Theodosius. The father,
+who by this time had pretty well composed himself, burst out again
+in tears upon hearing that name to which he had been so long
+disused, and upon receiving this instance of an unparalleled
+fidelity from one who he thought had several years since given
+herself up to the possession of another. Amidst the interruptions
+of his sorrow, seeing his penitent overwhelmed with grief, he was
+only able to bid her from time to time be comforted--to tell her
+that her sins were forgiven her--that her guilt was not so great as
+she apprehended--that she should not suffer herself to be afflicted
+above measure. After which he recovered himself enough to give her
+the absolution in form: directing her at the same time to repair to
+him again the next day, that he might encourage her in the pious
+resolution she had taken, and give her suitable exhortations for her
+behaviour in it. Constantia retired, and the next morning renewed
+her applications. Theodosius, having manned his soul with proper
+thoughts and reflections, exerted himself on this occasion in the
+best manner he could to animate his penitent in the course of life
+she was entering upon, and wear out of her mind those groundless
+fears and apprehensions which had taken possession of it; concluding
+with a promise to her, that he would from time to time continue his
+admonitions when she should have taken upon her the holy veil. "The
+rules of our respective orders," says he, "will not permit that I
+should see you; but you may assure yourself not only of having a
+place in my prayers, but of receiving such frequent instructions as
+I can convey to you by letters. Go on cheerfully in the glorious
+course you have undertaken, and you will quickly find such a peace
+and satisfaction in your mind which it is not in the power of the
+world to give."
+
+Constantia's heart was so elevated within the discourse of Father
+Francis, that the very next day she entered upon her vow. As soon
+as the solemnities of her reception were over, she retired, as it is
+usual, with the abbess into her own apartment.
+
+The abbess had been informed the night before of all that had passed
+between her novitiate and father Francis: from whom she now
+delivered to her the following letter:-
+
+
+"As the first-fruits of those joys and consolations which you may
+expect from the life you are now engaged in, I must acquaint you
+that Theodosius, whose death sits so heavy upon your thoughts, is
+still alive; and that the father to whom you have confessed yourself
+was once that Theodosius whom you so much lament. The love which we
+have had for one another will make us more happy in its
+disappointment than it could have done in its success. Providence
+has disposed of us for our advantage, though not according to our
+wishes. Consider your Theodosius still as dead, but assure yourself
+of one who will not cease to pray for you in father
+
+"FRANCIS."
+
+
+Constantia saw that the handwriting agreed with the contents of the
+letter; and, upon reflecting on the voice of the person, the
+behaviour, and above all the extreme sorrow of the father during her
+confession, she discovered Theodosius in every particular. After
+having wept with tears of joy, "It is enough," says she; "Theodosius
+is still in being: I shall live with comfort and die in peace."
+
+The letters which the father sent her afterwards are yet extant in
+the nunnery where she resided; and are often read to the young
+religious, in order to inspire them with good resolutions and
+sentiments of virtue. It so happened that after Constantia had
+lived about ten years in the cloister, a violent fever broke out in
+the place, which swept away great multitudes, and among others
+Theodosius. Upon his death-bed he sent his benediction in a very
+moving manner to Constantia, who at that time was herself so far
+gone in the same fatal distemper that she lay delirious. Upon the
+interval which generally precedes death in sickness of this nature,
+the abbess, finding that the physicians had given her over, told her
+that Theodosius had just gone before her, and that he had sent her
+his benediction in his last moments. Constantia received it with
+pleasure. "And now," says she, "if I do not ask anything improper,
+let me be buried by Theodosius. My vow reaches no further than the
+grave; what I ask is, I hope, no violation of it." She died soon
+after, and was interred according to her request.
+
+The tombs are still to be seen, with a short Latin inscription over
+them to the following purpose:-
+
+"Here lie the bodies of Father Francis and Sister Constance. They
+were lovely in their lives, and in their death they were not
+divided."
+
+
+
+GOOD NATURE.
+
+
+
+Sic vita erat: facile omnes perferre ac pati:
+Cum quibus erat cunque una, his sese dedere,
+Eorum obsequi studiis: advorsus nemini;
+Nunquam praeponens se aliis. Ita facillime
+Sine invidia invenias laudem. -
+TER., Andr., Act i. se. 1.
+
+His manner of life was this: to bear with everybody's humours; to
+comply with the inclinations and pursuits of those he conversed
+with; to contradict nobody; never to assume a superiority over
+others. This is the ready way to gain applause without exciting
+envy.
+
+Man is subject to innumerable pains and sorrows by the very
+condition of humanity, and yet, as if Nature had not sown evils
+enough in life, we are continually adding grief to grief, and
+aggravating the common calamity by our cruel treatment of one
+another. Every man's natural weight of affliction is still made
+more heavy by the envy, malice, treachery, or injustice of his
+neighbour. At the same time that the storm beats on the whole
+species, we are falling foul upon one another.
+
+Half the misery of human life might be extinguished, would men
+alleviate the general curse they lie under, by mutual offices of
+compassion, benevolence, and humanity. There is nothing, therefore,
+which we ought more to encourage in ourselves and others, than that
+disposition of mind which in our language goes under the title of
+good nature, and which I shall choose for the subject of this day's
+speculation.
+
+Good-nature is more agreeable in conversation than wit, and gives a
+certain air to the countenance which is more amiable than beauty.
+It shows virtue in the fairest light, takes off in some measure from
+the deformity of vice, and makes even folly and impertinence
+supportable.
+
+There is no society or conversation to be kept up in the world
+without good nature, or something which must bear its appearance,
+and supply its place. For this reason, mankind have been forced to
+invent a kind of artificial humanity, which is what we express by
+the word good-breeding. For if we examine thoroughly the idea of
+what we call so, we shall find it to be nothing else but an
+imitation and mimicry of good nature, or, in other terms,
+affability, complaisance, and easiness of temper, reduced into an
+art. These exterior shows and appearances of humanity render a man
+wonderfully popular and beloved, when they are founded upon a real
+good nature; but, without it, are like hypocrisy in religion, or a
+bare form of holiness, which, when it is discovered, makes a man
+more detestable than professed impiety.
+
+Good-nature is generally born with us: health, prosperity, and kind
+treatment from the world, are great cherishers of it where they find
+it; but nothing is capable of forcing it up, where it does not grow
+of itself. It is one of the blessings of a happy constitution,
+which education may improve, but not produce.
+
+Xenophon, in the life of his imaginary prince whom he describes as a
+pattern for real ones, is always celebrating the philanthropy and
+good nature of his hero, which he tells us he brought into the world
+with him; and gives many remarkable instances of it in his
+childhood, as well as in all the several parts of his life. Nay, on
+his death-bed, he describes him as being pleased, that while his
+soul returned to Him who made it, his body should incorporate with
+the great mother of all things, and by that means become beneficial
+to mankind. For which reason, he gives his sons a positive order
+not to enshrine it in gold or silver, but to lay it in the earth as
+soon as the life was gone out of it.
+
+An instance of such an overflowing of humanity, such an exuberant
+love to mankind, could not have entered into the imagination of a
+writer who had not a soul filled with great ideas, and a general
+benevolence to mankind.
+
+In that celebrated passage of Sallust, where Caesar and Cato are
+placed in such beautiful but opposite lights, Caesar's character is
+chiefly made up of good nature, as it showed itself in all its forms
+towards his friends or his enemies, his servants or dependents, the
+guilty or the distressed. As for Cato's character, it is rather
+awful than amiable. Justice seems most agreeable to the nature of
+God, and mercy to that of man. A Being who has nothing to pardon in
+Himself, may reward every man according to his works; but he whose
+very best actions must be seen with grains of allowance, cannot be
+too mild, moderate, and forgiving. For this reason, among all the
+monstrous characters in human nature, there is none so odious, nor
+indeed so exquisitely ridiculous, as that of a rigid, severe temper
+in a worthless man.
+
+This part of good nature however, which consists in the pardoning
+and overlooking of faults, is to be exercised only in doing
+ourselves justice, and that too in the ordinary commerce and
+occurrences of life; for, in the public administrations of justice,
+mercy to one may be cruelty to others.
+
+It is grown almost into a maxim, that good-natured men are not
+always men of the most wit. This observation, in my opinion, has no
+foundation in nature. The greatest wits I have conversed with are
+men eminent for their humanity. I take, therefore, this remark to
+have been occasioned by two reasons. First, because ill-nature
+among ordinary observers passes for wit. A spiteful saying
+gratifies so many little passions in those who hear it, that it
+generally meets with a good reception. The laugh rises upon it, and
+the man who utters it is looked upon as a shrewd satirist. This may
+be one reason why a great many pleasant companions appear so
+surprisingly dull when they have endeavoured to be merry in print;
+the public being more just than private clubs or assemblies, in
+distinguishing between what is wit and what is ill-nature.
+
+Another reason why the good-natured man may sometimes bring his wit
+in question is perhaps because he is apt to be moved with compassion
+for those misfortunes or infirmities which another would turn into
+ridicule, and by that means gain the reputation of a wit. The ill-
+natured man, though but of equal parts, gives himself a larger field
+to expatiate in; he exposes those failings in human nature which the
+other would cast a veil over, laughs at vices which the other either
+excuses or conceals, gives utterance to reflections which the other
+stifles, falls indifferently upon friends or enemies, exposes the
+person who has obliged him, and, in short, sticks at nothing that
+may establish his character as a wit. It is no wonder, therefore,
+he succeeds in it better than the man of humanity, as a person who
+makes use of indirect methods is more likely to grow rich than the
+fair trader.
+
+
+
+NEXT ESSAY
+
+
+
+- Quis enim bonus, aut face dignus
+Arcana, qualem Cereris vult esse sacerdos,
+Ulla aliena sibi credat mala? -
+JUV., Sat. xv. 140.
+
+Who can all sense of others' ills escape,
+Is but a brute, at best, in human shape.
+TATE.
+
+In one of my last week's papers, I treated of good-nature as it is
+the effect of constitution; I shall now speak of it as it is a moral
+virtue. The first may make a man easy in himself and agreeable to
+others, but implies no merit in him that is possessed of it. A man
+is no more to be praised upon this account, than because he has a
+regular pulse or a good digestion. This good nature, however, in
+the constitution, which Mr. Dryden somewhere calls "a milkiness of
+blood," is an admirable groundwork for the other. In order,
+therefore, to try our good-nature, whether it arises from the body
+or the mind, whether it be founded in the animal or rational part of
+our nature; in a word, whether it be such as is entitled to any
+other reward besides that secret satisfaction and contentment of
+mind which is essential to it, and the kind reception it procures us
+in the world, we must examine it by the following rules:
+
+First, whether it acts with steadiness and uniformity in sickness
+and in health, in prosperity and in adversity; if otherwise, it is
+to be looked upon as nothing else but an irradiation of the mind
+from some new supply of spirits, or a more kindly circulation of the
+blood. Sir Francis Bacon mentions a cunning solicitor, who would
+never ask a favour of a great man before dinner; but took care to
+prefer his petition at a time when the party petitioned had his mind
+free from care, and his appetites in good humour. Such a transient
+temporary good-nature as this, is not that philanthropy, that love
+of mankind, which deserves the title of a moral virtue.
+
+The next way of a man's bringing his good-nature to the test is to
+consider whether it operates according to the rules of reason and
+duty: for if, notwithstanding its general benevolence to mankind,
+it makes no distinction between its objects; if it exerts itself
+promiscuously towards the deserving and the undeserving; if it
+relieves alike the idle and the indigent; if it gives itself up to
+the first petitioner, and lights upon any one rather by accident
+than choice--it may pass for an amiable instinct, but must not
+assume the name of a moral virtue.
+
+The third trial of good-nature will be the examining ourselves
+whether or no we are able to exert it to our own disadvantage, and
+employ it on proper objects, notwithstanding any little pain, want,
+or inconvenience, which may arise to ourselves from it: in a word,
+whether we are willing to risk any part of our fortune, our
+reputation, our health or ease, for the benefit of mankind. Among
+all these expressions of good nature, I shall single out that which
+goes under the general name of charity, as it consists in relieving
+the indigent: that being a trial of this kind which offers itself
+to us almost at all times and in every place.
+
+I should propose it as a rule, to every one who is provided with any
+competency of fortune more than sufficient for the necessaries of
+life, to lay aside a certain portion of his income for the use of
+the poor. This I would look upon as an offering to Him who has a
+right to the whole, for the use of those whom, in the passage
+hereafter mentioned, He has described as His own representatives
+upon earth. At the same time, we should manage our charity with
+such prudence and caution, that we may not hurt our own friends or
+relations whilst we are doing good to those who are strangers to us.
+
+This may possibly be explained better by an example than by a rule.
+
+Eugenius is a man of a universal good nature, and generous beyond
+the extent of his fortune; but withal so prudent in the economy of
+his affairs, that what goes out in charity is made up by good
+management. Eugenius has what the world calls two hundred pounds a
+year; but never values himself above nine-score, as not thinking he
+has a right to the tenth part, which he always appropriates to
+charitable uses. To this sum he frequently makes other voluntary
+additions, insomuch, that in a good year--for such he accounts those
+in which he has been able to make greater bounties than ordinary--he
+has given above twice that sum to the sickly and indigent. Eugenius
+prescribes to himself many particular days of fasting and
+abstinence, in order to increase his private bank of charity, and
+sets aside what would be the current expenses of those times for the
+use of the poor. He often goes afoot where his business calls him,
+and at the end of his walk has given a shilling, which in his
+ordinary methods of expense would have gone for coach-hire, to the
+first necessitous person that has fallen in his way. I have known
+him, when he has been going to a play or an opera, divert the money
+which was designed for that purpose upon an object of charity whom
+he has met with in the street; and afterwards pass his evening in a
+coffee-house, or at a friend's fireside, with much greater
+satisfaction to himself than he could have received from the most
+exquisite entertainments of the theatre. By these means he is
+generous without impoverishing himself, and enjoys his estate by
+making it the property of others.
+
+There are few men so cramped in their private affairs, who may not
+be charitable after this manner, without any disadvantage to
+themselves, or prejudice to their families. It is but sometimes
+sacrificing a diversion or convenience to the poor, and turning the
+usual course of our expenses into a better channel. This is, I
+think, not only the most prudent and convenient, but the most
+meritorious piece of charity which we can put in practice. By this
+method, we in some measure share the necessities of the poor at the
+same time that we relieve them, and make ourselves not only their
+patrons, but their fellow-sufferers.
+
+Sir Thomas Brown, in the last part of his "Religio Medici," in which
+he describes his charity in several heroic instances, and with a
+noble heat of sentiments, mentions that verse in the Proverbs of
+Solomon: "He that giveth to the poor lendeth to the Lord." There
+is more rhetoric in that one sentence, says he, than in a library of
+sermons; and indeed, if those sentences were understood by the
+reader with the same emphasis as they are delivered by the author,
+we needed not those volumes of instructions, but might be honest by
+an epitome.
+
+This passage of Scripture is, indeed, wonderfully persuasive; but I
+think the same thought is carried much further in the New Testament,
+where our Saviour tells us, in a most pathetic manner, that he shall
+hereafter regard the clothing of the naked, the feeding of the
+hungry, and the visiting of the imprisoned, as offices done to
+Himself, and reward them accordingly. Pursuant to those passages in
+Holy Scripture, I have somewhere met with the epitaph of a
+charitable man, which has very much pleased me. I cannot recollect
+the words, but the sense of it is to this purpose: What I spent I
+lost; what I possessed is left to others; what I gave away remains
+with me.
+
+Since I am thus insensibly engaged in Sacred Writ, I cannot forbear
+making an extract of several passages which I have always read with
+great delight in the book of Job. It is the account which that holy
+man gives of his behaviour in the days of his prosperity; and, if
+considered only as a human composition, is a finer picture of a
+charitable and good-natured man than is to be met with in any other
+author.
+
+"Oh that I were as in months past, as in the days when God preserved
+me: When his candle shined upon my head, and when by his light I
+walked through darkness: When the Almighty was yet with me; when my
+children were about me: When I washed my steps with butter, and the
+rock poured me out rivers of oil.
+
+"When the ear heard me, then it blessed me; and when the eye saw me,
+it gave witness to me. Because I delivered the poor that cried, and
+the fatherless, and him that had none to help him. The blessing of
+him that was ready to perish came upon me, and I caused the widow's
+heart to sing for joy. I was eyes to the blind; and feet was I to
+the lame; I was a father to the poor, and the cause which I knew not
+I searched out. Did not I weep for him that was in trouble? Was
+not my soul grieved for the poor? Let me be weighed in an even
+balance, that God may know mine integrity. If I did despise the
+cause of my man-servant or of my maid-servant when they contended
+with me: What then shall I do when God riseth up? and when he
+visiteth, what shall I answer him? Did not he that made me in the
+womb, make him? and did not one fashion us in the womb? If I have
+withheld the poor from their desire, or have caused the eyes of the
+widow to fail; Or have eaten my morsel myself alone, and the
+fatherless hath not eaten thereof; If I have seen any perish for
+want of clothing, or any poor without covering; If his loins have
+not blessed me, and if he were not warmed with the fleece of my
+sheep; If I have lifted my hand against the fatherless, when I saw
+my help in the gate: Then let mine arm fall from my shoulder-blade,
+and mine arm be broken from the bone. If I [have] rejoiced at the
+destruction of him that hated me, or lifted up myself when evil
+found him: Neither have I suffered my mouth to sin, by wishing a
+curse to his soul. The stranger did not lodge in the street; but I
+opened my doors to the traveller. If my land cry against me, or
+that the furrows likewise thereof complain: If I have eaten the
+fruits thereof without money, or have caused the owners thereof to
+lose their life: Let thistles grow instead of wheat, and cockle
+instead of barley."
+
+
+
+A GRINNING MATCH.
+
+
+
+- Remove fera monstra, tuaeque
+Saxificos vultus, quaecunque ea, tolle Medusae.
+OVID, Met. v. 216.
+
+Hence with those monstrous features, and, O! spare
+That Gorgon's look, and petrifying stare.
+POPE.
+
+In a late paper, I mentioned the project of an ingenious author for
+the erecting of several handicraft prizes to be contended for by our
+British artisans, and the influence they might have towards the
+improvement of our several manufactures. I have since that been
+very much surprised by the following advertisement, which I find in
+the Post-boy of the 11th instant, and again repeated in the Post-boy
+of the 15th:-
+
+"On the 9th of October next will be run for upon Coleshill-heath, in
+Warwickshire, a plate of six guineas value, three heats, by any
+horse, mare, or gelding that hath not won above the value of 5
+pounds, the winning horse to be sold for 10 pounds, to carry 10
+stone weight, if 14 hands high; if above or under, to carry or be
+allowed weight for inches, and to be entered Friday, the 5th, at the
+Swan in Coleshill, before six in the evening. Also, a plate of less
+value to be run for by asses. The same day a gold ring to be
+grinn'd for by men."
+
+The first of these diversions that is to be exhibited by the 10
+pounds race-horses, may probably have its use; but the two last, in
+which the asses and men are concerned, seem to me altogether
+extraordinary and unaccountable. Why they should keep running asses
+at Coleshill, or how making mouths turns to account in Warwickshire,
+more than in any other parts of England, I cannot comprehend. I
+have looked over all the Olympic games, and do not find anything in
+them like an ass-race, or a match at grinning. However it be, I am
+informed that several asses are now kept in body-clothes, and
+sweated every morning upon the heath: and that all the country-
+fellows within ten miles of the Swan grin an hour or two in their
+glasses every morning, in order to qualify themselves for the 9th of
+October. The prize which is proposed to be grinned for has raised
+such an ambition among the common people of out-grinning one
+another, that many very discerning persons are afraid it should
+spoil most of the faces in the county; and that a Warwickshire man
+will be known by his grin, as Roman Catholics imagine a Kentish man
+is by his tail. The gold ring which is made the prize of deformity,
+is just the reverse of the golden apple that was formerly made the
+prize of beauty, and should carry for its poesy the old motto
+inverted:
+
+
+Detur tetriori.
+
+
+Or, to accommodate it to the capacity of the combatants,
+
+
+The frightfull'st grinner
+Be the winner.
+
+
+In the meanwhile I would advise a Dutch painter to be present at
+this great controversy of faces, in order to make a collection of
+the most remarkable grins that shall be there exhibited.
+
+I must not here omit an account which I lately received of one of
+these grinning matches from a gentleman, who, upon reading the
+above-mentioned advertisement, entertained a coffee-house with the
+following narrative:- Upon the taking of Namur, amidst other public
+rejoicings made on that occasion, there was a gold ring given by a
+Whig justice of peace to be grinned for. The first competitor that
+entered the lists was a black, swarthy Frenchman, who accidentally
+passed that way, and being a man naturally of a withered look and
+hard features, promised himself good success. He was placed upon a
+table in the great point of view, and, looking upon the company like
+Milton's Death,
+
+
+Grinned horribly a ghastly smile.
+
+
+His muscles were so drawn together on each side of his face that he
+showed twenty teeth at a grin, and put the country in some pain lest
+a foreigner should carry away the honour of the day; but upon a
+further trial they found he was master only of the merry grin.
+
+The next that mounted the table was a malcontent in those days, and
+a great master in the whole art of grinning, but particularly
+excelled in the angry grin. He did his part so well that he is said
+to have made half a dozen women miscarry; but the justice being
+apprised by one who stood near him that the fellow who grinned in
+his face was a Jacobite, and being unwilling that a disaffected
+person should win the gold ring, and be looked upon as the best
+grinner in the county, he ordered the oaths to be tendered unto him
+upon his quitting the table, which the grinner refusing, he was set
+aside as an unqualified person. There were several other grotesque
+figures that presented themselves, which it would be too tedious to
+describe. I must not, however, omit a ploughman, who lived in the
+further part of the county, and being very lucky in a pair of long
+lantern jaws, wrung his face into such a hideous grimace that every
+feature of it appeared under a different distortion. The whole
+company stood astonished at such a complicated grin, and were ready
+to assign the prize to him, had it not been proved by one of his
+antagonists that he had practised with verjuice for some days
+before, and had a crab found upon him at the very time of grinning;
+upon which the best judges of grinning declared it as their opinion
+that he was not to be looked upon as a fair grinner, and therefore
+ordered him to be set aside as a cheat.
+
+The prize, it seems, fell at length upon a cobbler, Giles Gorgon by
+name, who produced several new grins of his own invention, having
+been used to cut faces for many years together over his last. At
+the very first grin he cast every human feature out of his
+countenance; at the second he became the face of spout; at the third
+a baboon; at the fourth the head of a bass-viol; and at the fifth a
+pair of nut-crackers. The whole assembly wondered at his
+accomplishments, and bestowed the ring on him unanimously; but what
+he esteemed more than all the rest, a country wench, whom he had
+wooed in vain for above five years before, was so charmed with his
+grins and the applauses which he received on all sides, that she
+married him the week following, and to this day wears the prize upon
+her finger, the cobbler having made use of it as his wedding ring.
+
+This paper might perhaps seem very impertinent if it grew serious in
+the conclusion. I would, nevertheless, leave it to the
+consideration of those who are the patrons of this monstrous trial
+of skill, whether or no they are not guilty, in some measure, of an
+affront to their species in treating after this manner the "human
+face divine," and turning that part of us, which has so great an
+image impressed upon it, into the image of a monkey; whether the
+raising such silly competitions among the ignorant, proposing prizes
+for such useless accomplishments, filling the common people's heads
+with such senseless ambitions, and inspiring them with such absurd
+ideas of superiority and pre-eminence, has not in it something
+immoral as well as ridiculous.
+
+
+
+TRUST IN GOD.
+
+
+
+Si fractus illabatur orbis,
+Impavidum ferient ruinae.
+- HOR., Car. iii. 3, 7.
+
+Should the whole frame of nature round him break,
+In ruin and confusion hurled,
+He, unconcerned, would hear the mighty crack,
+And stand secure amidst a falling world.
+ANON.
+
+Man, considered in himself, is a very helpless and a very wretched
+being. He is subject every moment to the greatest calamities and
+misfortunes. He is beset with dangers on all sides, and may become
+unhappy by numberless casualties which he could not foresee, nor
+have prevented had he foreseen them.
+
+It is our comfort, while we are obnoxious to so many accidents, that
+we are under the care of One who directs contingencies, and has in
+His hands the management of everything that is capable of annoying
+or offending us; who knows the assistance we stand in need of, and
+is always ready to bestow it on those who ask it of Him.
+
+The natural homage which such a creature bears to so infinitely wise
+and good a Being is a firm reliance on Him for the blessings and
+conveniences of life, and an habitual trust in Him for deliverance
+out of all such dangers and difficulties as may befall us.
+
+The man who always lives in this disposition of mind has not the
+same dark and melancholy views of human nature as he who considers
+himself abstractedly from this relation to the Supreme Being. At
+the same time that he reflects upon his own weakness and
+imperfection he comforts himself with the contemplation of those
+Divine attributes which are employed for his safety and his welfare.
+He finds his want of foresight made up by the Omniscience of Him who
+is his support. He is not sensible of his own want of strengths
+when he knows that his helper is almighty. In short, the person who
+has a firm trust on the Supreme Being is powerful in His power, wise
+by His wisdom, happy by His happiness. He reaps the benefit of
+every Divine attribute, and loses his own insufficiency in the
+fulness of infinite perfection.
+
+To make our lives more easy to us, we are commanded to put our trust
+in Him, who is thus able to relieve and succour us; the Divine
+goodness having made such reliance a duty, notwithstanding we should
+have been miserable had it been forbidden us.
+
+Among several motives which might be made use of to recommend this
+duty to us, I shall only take notice of these that follow.
+
+The first and strongest is, that we are promised He will not fail
+those who put their trust in Him.
+
+But without considering the supernatural blessing which accompanies
+this duty, we may observe that it has a natural tendency to its own
+reward, or, in other words, that this firm trust and confidence in
+the great Disposer of all things contributes very much to the
+getting clear of any affliction, or to the bearing it manfully. A
+person who believes he has his succour at hand, and that he acts in
+the sight of his friend, often exerts himself beyond his abilities,
+and does wonders that are not to be matched by one who is not
+animated with such a confidence of success. I could produce
+instances from history of generals who, out of a belief that they
+were under the protection of some invisible assistant, did not only
+encourage their soldiers to do their utmost, but have acted
+themselves beyond what they would have done had they not been
+inspired by such a belief. I might in the same manner show how such
+a trust in the assistance of an Almighty Being naturally produces
+patience, hope, cheerfulness, and all other dispositions of the mind
+that alleviate those calamities which we are not able to remove.
+
+The practice of this virtue administers great comfort to the mind of
+man in times of poverty and affliction, but most of all in the hour
+of death. When the soul is hovering in the last moments of its
+separation, when it is just entering on another state of existence,
+to converse with scenes, and objects, and companions, that are
+altogether new--what can support her under such tremblings of
+thought, such fear, such anxiety, such apprehensions, but the
+casting of all her cares upon Him who first gave her being, who has
+conducted her through one stage of it, and will be always with her,
+to guide and comfort her in her progress through eternity?
+
+David has very beautifully represented this steady reliance on God
+Almighty in his twenty-third Psalm, which is a kind of pastoral
+hymn, and filled with those allusions which are usual in that kind
+of writing. As the poetry is very exquisite, I shall present my
+reader with the following translation of it:
+
+
+I.
+
+The Lord my pasture shall prepare,
+And feed me with a shepherd's care;
+His presence shall my wants supply,
+And guard me with a watchful eye;
+My noonday walks He shall attend,
+And all my midnight hours defend.
+
+II.
+
+When in the sultry glebe I faint,
+Or on the thirsty mountain pant;
+To fertile vales and dewy meads
+My weary, wand'ring steps He leads;
+Where peaceful rivers, soft and slow,
+Amid the verdant landscape flow.
+
+III.
+
+Though in the paths of death I tread,
+With gloomy horrors overspread,
+My steadfast heart shall fear no ill,
+For thou, O Lord, art with me still;
+Thy friendly crook shall give me aid,
+And guide me through the dreadful shade.
+
+IV.
+
+Though in a bare and rugged way,
+Through devious, lonely wilds I stray,
+Thy bounty shall my pains beguile:
+The barren wilderness shall smile
+With sudden greens and herbage crowned,
+And streams shall murmur all around.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext Essays and Tales, by Joseph Addison
+